Interwar Portugal was in many ways a microcosm of Europe's encounter
with modernity: reshaped by industrialization, urban growth, and the
antagonism between liberalism and authoritarianism, it also witnessed
new forms of media and mass culture that transformed daily life. This
fascinating study of newspapers in 1920s Portugal explores how the new
"modernist reportage" embodied the spirit of the era while mediating
some of its most spectacular episodes, from political upheavals to lurid
crimes of passion. In the process, Luís Trindade illuminates the twofold
nature of that journalism--both historical account and material object,
it epitomized a distinctly modern entanglement of narrative and event.