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Translation Studies
Magazines
Much communication of ideas, information and attitudes among the modern people is carried on through magazines. Thousands of periodicals fall within two categories. They range from the slick-paper; form colour monthly with circulations in the millions down to the small, special interest quarterly that, though virtually unknown to the general public may have very strong influence within its field. The magazine exists to inform, entertain, and influence its readers editorially and put before them advertising messages of national or regional scope with a few exceptions, this outlook is national rather than local. Magazines never appear more frequently than once a week; thus, they have more time to dig into issues and situations than the daily newspapers, and consequently they have a better opportunity to bring events into focus and interpret their meaning. Some are published likely for their entertainment value and are loaded with material of little consequence. Others deal entirely with a serious investigation of contemporary problems, and many combine entertainment arid service material., with reporting and interpretation. The magazine, with its more durable cover and bound pages, has a semi permanence the newspaper lacks. Magazines such as National Geographic often are kept around a home for years, or passed from hand to hand. They are halfway between newspapers and books in this regard and also in content. Broadly speaking, the magazine examiners a situation from the middle distances, and the book examines it from the higher ground of historical perspective. There is another basic difference between newspapers and magazines. A newspaper must appeal to an entire community and have a little of everything for almost everybody. With a few exceptions, like the Wall street Journal, a newspaper cannot be aimed at a single special interest group and survive. Yet hundreds of successful magazines are designed for reading by such limited-interest groups as gasoline station operators dentists, poultry farmers and model railroad fans. Therein lies the richness of diversity that makes the magazine field so attractive to many editorial workers. Books Books are a medium of mass communication that deeply affect the lives of many. They convey much of the past, help us understand ourselves and the world we live in, and enable us to plan better for the future. Books are a significant tool of our educational process. And they provide entertainment for people of every age. The nation's educational, business, professional and social life could not survive long without books. Judge and attorneys must examine law tomes continually; doctors constantly refer to the repositories of medical wisdom and experience; governmental officials must remain aware of all the ramifications of legislative fiat. Teachers and pupils alike find in text books the most knowledge of history, philosophy, the sciences, literature and the social sciences accumulated throughout the ages. Men and women of every walk of life read to keep 112 abreast of a fast-changing world; to find inspiration, relaxation, and pleasure; and to gain knowledge. Books, without doubt, explain and interpret virtually every activity. Creative writing has been one of the principal hallmarks by which each succeeding world civilization has been measured; the works of Plato and Aristotle, for example, both reflected and refined the quality of early Greek life. Social historians long have examined the creative literature as well as the factual records of a civilization in their efforts to reconstruct the life of the people of a particular time and place. Whether they are paperbacks or hard-cover volumes printed on quality paper, books provide a permanence characteristic of no other communications medium. The newspaper reporter and the radio-television commentator write and speak in the main to our ephemeral audience. Those who write for magazines may anticipate longer life for their messages. Books, however, such as the superb copies of the Bible produced by Gutenberg in the fifteenth century, live always. For the mass communicator, books and book publishing perform several important functions. They not only serve as wellsprings of knowledge, but through translation and reprinting book publishing may convey vital ideas to billions of people throughout the world. And in the publishing trade itself the journalist may find a rewarding outlet in editing and promoting the distribution of books. Because of the relative slowness of writing, editing and publishing a manuscript, lack of characteristic of immediacy possessed by other media in conveying messages to the public. What may be lost in timeliness, however, is often more than compensated for by the extreme care possible in checking facts, attaining perspective, and rewriting copy for maximum effectiveness. This sustained, systematic exposition of a story or of an idea, (with the reader's can committing opportunity to reread, underscore, and study at leisure) is afforded only by books among all the media of communication. Download 1.1 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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