
Princeton UP Ideas Podcast Tom Arnold-Forster, "Walter Lippmann: An Intellectual Biography" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Aug 27, 2025
Tom Arnold-Forster, a historian at the Rothermere American Institute, discusses his latest work on Walter Lippmann, a pivotal American journalist and political theorist. They dive into Lippmann's evolution from a liberal socialist to a conservative liberal, exploring his impactful writings on media and public opinion. Arnold-Forster emphasizes Lippmann's theory of journalistic objectivity and reflects on his critiques of U.S. foreign policy during Vietnam. The conversation draws parallels to current challenges in media and democracy, revealing Lippmann's complex legacy.
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Objectivity As A Democratic Tool
- For Lippmann, objectivity is political: a tool to help democracy perceive complex realities.
- He saw objectivity as enabling truthful reporting, not neutral avoidance of politics.
Public Opinion's Central Argument
- Public Opinion reframes 'stereotype' as a political concept explaining opinion formation.
- Lippmann presents a paradox: democracy is necessary but inherently hard in mass modernity.
Dewey–Lippmann Debate Reconsidered
- The famed Dewey–Lippmann debate is largely a later scholarly construct and misrepresents their agreement.
- Both shared concerns about expertise within modern democratic governance.










