The Top 100 Works of Journalism of the Century
As selected by Madeleine Blais, Alan Brinkley, David Brinkley, Lydia Chavez, Karen Durbin, Clay Felker, Jeff Greenfield, Pete Hamill, Mary McGrory, Nancy Maynard, Eric Newton, Dorothy Rabinowitz, Gene Roberts, Morley Safer, David Shaw, George Will and Ben Yagoda;
And the New York University Journalism faculty: David Dent, Todd Gitlin, Lamar Graham, Brooke Kroeger, Susie Linfield, Michael Ludlum, Robert Manoff, Anne Matthews, Pamela Newkirk, Michael Norman, Richard Petrow, Mary Quigley, Marcia Rock, Jay Rosen, Stephen Solomon, Mitchell Stephens, Carol Sternhell, Jane Stone and Ellen Willis. Project director: Mitchell Stephens. Announced March 1999.
Article explaining how the list was selected.
Article from the New York Times .
Best of the Decade: 2000-2009.
- John Hersey. “Hiroshima.” 1946
- Rachel Carson. “Silent Spring.” 1962
- Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Watergate investigations for the Washington Post. 1972-73
- Edward R. Murrow. “This is London . . .” radio reports for CBS on the German bombing of London. Also collected in book form. 1940
- Ida Tarbell. “The History of the Standard Oil Company” investigation. 1902-1904 (book 1904)
- Lincoln Steffens. “The Shame of the Cities.” 1902-1904 (book 1904)
- John Reed. “Ten Days That Shook the World.” 1919
- H.L. Mencken. Coverage of the Scopes “monkey” trial. 1925
- Ernie Pyle. Reports from Europe and the Pacific during World War II. 1940-45
- Edward R. Murrow and Fred Friendly. See It Now documentary taking on Senator Joseph McCarthy. 1954
- Edward R. Murrow, David Lowe and Fred Friendly. CBS Reports documentary “Harvest of Shame.” 1960
- Seymour Hersh. Investigation of massacre committed by American soldiers at My Lai in Vietnam. 1969
- New York Times. Publication of the Pentagon Papers. 1971
- James Agee and Walker Evans. “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.” 1941
- W.E.B. DuBois. “The Souls of Black Folk.” 1903
- I.F. Stone. I.F. Stone’s Weekly. 1953-67
- Henry Hampton. “Eyes on the Prize.” 1987
- Tom Wolfe. “Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.” 1968
- Norman Mailer. “The Armies of the Night.” 1968
- Hannah Arendt. “Eichmann in Jerusalem.” 1963
- William Shirer. “Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondant, 1939-1941.” 1941
- Truman Capote. “In Cold Blood: A True Account of a Multiple Murder and Its Consequences.” 1965
- Joan Didion. “Slouching Towards Bethlehem” (collected essays). 1968
- Tom Wolfe. “The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby.” 1965
- Michael Herr. “Dispatches.” 1977
- Theodore White. “The Making of the President: 1960.” 1961
- Robert Capa. Ten photographs from D-Day. 1944
- J. Anthony Lukas. “Common Ground: A Turbulent Decade in the Lives of Three American Families.” 1985
- Richard Harding Davis. Coverage of German march into Belgium. 1914
- Dorothy Thompson. Reports on the rise of Hitler in Cosmopolitan and Saturday Evening Post. 1931-34
- John Steinbeck. Reports on Okie migrant camp life for the San Francisco News. 1936
- A.J. Liebling. “The Road Back to Paris.” 1944
- Ernest Hemingway. Journalistic reports on the Spanish Civil War. 1937-38
- Martha Gellhorn. “The Face of War.” 1959
- James Baldwin. “The Fire Next Time.” 1963
- Joseph Mitchell. “Up in the Old Hotel and Other Stories.” 1992
- Betty Friedan. “The Feminine Mystique.” 1963
- Ralph Nader. “Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile.” 1965
- Herblock. Political cartoons. 1950
- James Baldwin. “Letter from the South: Nobody Knows My Name.” 1959
- Huyn Cong Ut. Photograph of a burning girl running from a napalm attack. 1972
- Pauline Kael. “Trash, Art, and the Movies.” 1969
- Gay Talese. “Fame and Obscurity: Portraits by Gay Talese.” 1970
- Randy Shilts. Reporting on AIDS. 1981-85
- Janet Flanner (Genet). “Paris Journals” in The New Yorker. 1944-45
- Neil Sheehan. “A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam.” 1988
- A. J. Liebling. “The Wayward Pressman.” 1947
- Tom Wolfe. “The Right Stuff.” 1979
- Murray Kempton. “America Comes of Middle Age: Columns 1950-1962.” 1963
- Murray Kempton. “Part of Our Time: Some Ruins and Monuments of the Thirties.” 1955
- Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele. Philadelphia Inquirer series: “America: What Went Wrong.” 1991
- Taylor Branch. “Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63.” 1988
- Harrison Salisbury. Reporting from the Soviet Union for the New York Times. 1949-54
- John McPhee. “The John McPhee Reader.” 1976
- ABC. Live broadcast of Army-McCarthy hearings. 1954
- Frederick Wiseman. “Titicut Follies.” 1967
- David Remnick. “Lenin’s Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire.” 1993
- Richard Ben Cramer. “What It Takes: The Way to the White House.” 1992
- Jonathan Schell. “The Fate of the Earth.” 1982
- Russell Baker. “Franks and Beans,” in the New York Times. 1975
- Homer Bigart. Account in the New York Herald-Tribune of being over Japan in a bomber when World War II came to an end. 1945
- Ben Hecht. Series of columns: “1001 Afternoons in Chicago.” 1922
- Walter Cronkite. Documentary on Vietnam. 1968
- Walter Lippmann. Early essays for the New Republic. 1914
- Margaret Bourke-White. Photographs for Life magazine following the defeat of Germany. 1945
- Lillian Ross. “Reporting.” 1964
- Nicholas Lemann. “The Promised Land.” 1991
- Joe Rosenthal. Photograph of Marines raising a U.S. flag on Mount Suribachi on the island of Iwo Jima. 1945
- Hodding Carter, Jr. “Go for Broke,” in Carter’s Delta Democrat-Times (Greenville, MS). 1945
- The New Yorker. “The New Yorker Book of War Pieces.” 1947
- Meyer Berger. Report on killings of Howard Unruh in the New York Times. 1949
- Norman Mailer. “The Executioner’s Song.” 1979
- Robert Capa. Spanish Civil War photos for Life. 1936
- Susan Sontag. “Notes on Camp.” 1964
- Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. “All the President’s Men.” 1974
- John Hersey. “Here To Stay.” 1963
- A.J. Liebling. “The Earl of Louisiana.” 1961
- Mike Davis. “City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles.” 1990
- Melissa Fay Greene. “Praying for Sheetrock.” 1991
- J. Anthony Lukas. “The Two Worlds of Linda Fitzpatrick,” in the New York Times. 1967
- Herbert Bayard Swope. “Klan Exposed.” 1921
- William Allen White. “To an Anxious Friend.” 1922
- Edward R. Murrow. Report of the liberation of Buchenwald. 1945
- Joseph Mitchell. “McSorley’s Wonderful Saloon.” 1943
- Lillian Ross. “Picture.” 1952
- Earl Brown. Series of articles on race for Harper’s and Life magazines. 1942-44
- Greil Marcus. “Mystery Train.” 1975
- Morley Safer. Report for CBS on atrocities committed by American soldiers on the hamlet of Cam Ne in Vietnam. 1965
- Ted Poston. Coverage of the “Little Scottsboro” trial. 1949
- Leon Dash. “Rosa Lee’s Story” in the Washington Post. 1994
- Jane Kramer. “The Europeans.” 1988
- Eddie Adams and Vo Suu. Photograph of a Saigon execution. 1968
- Grantland Rice. “Notre Dame’s ‘Four Horsemen’.” 1924
- Jane Kramer. “The Politics of Memory.” 1996
- Frank McCourt. “Angela’s Ashes.” 1996
- Vincent Sheean. “Personal History.” 1935
- W.E.B. DuBois. Columns on race during his tenure as editor of The Crisis. 1910-34
- Damon Runyon. Crime reporting. 1926
- Joe McGinniss. “The Selling of the President 1968.” 1969
- Hunter S. Thompson. “Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail.” Book. 1973