Nieman Reports
The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University
Vol. 54 No. 3 Fall 2000
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Nieman Reports

Vol. 54 No. 3 Fall 2000
The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University
4 Narrative Journalism
5 Narrative Journalism Comes of Age By Mark Kramer
9 Exploring Relationships Across Racial Lines By Gerald Boyd
11 The False Dichotomy and Narrative Journalism By Roy Peter Clark
13 The Verdict Is in the 112th Paragraph By Thomas French
16 'Just Write What Happened.' By William F. Woo
18 The State of Narrative Nonfiction Writing Robert Vare
20 Talking About Narrative Journalism A Panel of Journalists
23 'Narrative Writing Looked Easy.' By Richard Read
25 Narrative Journalism Goes Multimedia By Mark Bowden
29 Weaving Storytelling Into Breaking News By Rick Bragg
31 The Risks of Lunch With Sharon Stone By Anthony DeCurtis
33 Lulling Viewers Into a State of Complicity By Ted Koppel
34 Sticky Storytelling By Robert Krulwich
35 Has the Camera's Eye Replaced the Writer's Descriptive Hand? Michael Kelly
37 Narrative Storytelling in a Drive-By Medium By Carolyn Mungo
39 Combining Narrative With Analysis By Laura Sessions Stepp
42 Literary Nonfiction Constructs a Narrative Foundation By Madeleine Blais
43 Me and the System: The Personal Essay and Health Policy By Fitzhugh Mullan
45 Photojournalism
46 Photographs By James Nachtwey
48 The Unbearable Weight of Witness By Michele McDonald
49 Photographers Can't Hide Behind Their Cameras By Steve Northup
51 Do Images of War Need Justification? By Philip Caputo
52 The Perils of Growing Comfortable With Evil By Brent Staples
54 'Basically We're Alone. Left Up to Our Own Wits.' A Panel of War Photographers
58 Dying to Get the Story By Mary Kay Magistad
59 Journalists Learn How to Protect Themselves in War A Panel of Instructors
62 Words & Reflections
63 Questions Crime Reporters Sometimes Forget to Ask By John Painter, Jr.
66 Dead Men Talking By Ken Armstrong
68 An Indictment of the Washington Press By Michael Gartner
69 Harper's Magazine: A Survivor! By Robert Manning
71 Can Journalism Be Fair? By Philip Meyer
72 Freelancers Confront New Challenges By Anne Driscoll
75 International Journalism
76 Journalism in Transition in South Africa By Mathatha Tsedu
77 A Story of Courage in South African Journalism By Dennis Cruywagen
79 In Zimbabwe, the Independent Press Struggles to Survive By David Karanja
82 Imprisonment and Torture of Journalists in Zimbabwe By Mark G. Chavunduka
84 Lessons Learned in Africa By Wilson Wanene
86 Top 10 Underreported Humanitarian Stories Doctors Without Borders
88 From Darkness Into Blinding Glare By Susan Moeller
89 Coverage of AIDS in Africa By Susan Moeller
3 Curator's Corner
91 Nieman Notes
91 Reading Between the Lions By Judith Stoia
92 Class Notes
96 End Note
Howard Simons' Legacy Lives On
By Marcia Slacum Greene

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