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Prism me a lie tell me a truth : tehelka as metaphor

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: New Delhi Roli Books 2009Description: xxiii,587p. HB 25.3x17cmISBN:
  • 9788174365804
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 302.231 TREP
Summary: In March 2001, the website Tehelka broke Operation West End, the biggest undercover news story in Indian journalism.Using spycams and masquerading as arms dealers, Tehelka's reporters infiltrated the Indian government, bribed army officers,gave money to the president of the ruling party and the defence minister's close colleague right in the defence minister's residence. This eventually forced both the minister's resignations. In a rigorously researched and searing authentic account of the Tehelka expose and its aftermath, Madhu trehan does a forensic study of the imperatives at the root of it, the characters and heroes andvillans of the story, and of how the system got back:by obfuscating, by attempting to destroy Tehelka and its investors. Trehan shows how the goverment used instruments of democracy to destroy the investors without leaving any footprints.In the style of Roshomon, the story is related by numerous participants of the same incidents and, of course,none of the stories tally. With exhuastive personal interviews, this is a must-read for anybody who wants to understand modern India- or even better, modern international journalism.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Donated Books Donated Books St Aloysius PG Library MAJMC 302.231 TREP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available PG024738
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In March 2001, the website Tehelka broke Operation West End, the biggest undercover news story in Indian journalism.Using spycams and masquerading as arms dealers, Tehelka's reporters infiltrated the Indian government, bribed army officers,gave money to the president of the ruling party and the defence minister's close colleague right in the defence minister's residence.
This eventually forced both the minister's resignations. In a rigorously researched and searing authentic account of the Tehelka expose and its aftermath, Madhu trehan does a forensic study of the imperatives at the root of it, the characters and heroes andvillans of the story, and of how the system got back:by obfuscating, by attempting to destroy Tehelka and its investors.
Trehan shows how the goverment used instruments of democracy to destroy the investors without leaving any footprints.In the style
of Roshomon, the story is related by numerous participants of the same incidents and, of course,none of the stories tally.
With exhuastive personal interviews, this is a must-read for anybody who wants to understand modern India- or even better, modern international journalism.

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