Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks

In 2013, journalist Glenn Greenwald met with Edward Snowden, who leaked the most documents in the history of the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). Greenwald reported on these documents and proved that the NSA spied on millions of American citizens. However, he also provided commentary about the s...

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Main Author: Rebecca M. Rice
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SJSU Scholarworks 2021-01-01
Series:Secrecy and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss2/7/
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spelling doaj-bf038f21db3e4367833343810508812f2021-01-20T02:12:19ZengSJSU ScholarworksSecrecy and Society2377-61882021-01-0122 Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA LeaksRebecca M. Rice0University of Nevada Las VegasIn 2013, journalist Glenn Greenwald met with Edward Snowden, who leaked the most documents in the history of the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). Greenwald reported on these documents and proved that the NSA spied on millions of American citizens. However, he also provided commentary about the state of journalism and argued that journalists are often complicit in the keeping of state secrets. Using a rhetorical analysis of Greenwald's writings in The Guardian and his later book, this essay argues that journalists function as a technical audience that debates professional standards for leaking secrets. In Greenwald's case, journalists were involved in the "re-secreting" of NSA behavior as they focused their coverage on Greenwald. This essay finds that secrets are communicatively revealed and concealed using different rhetorical appeals. In an age of political hostility toward journalists, the success of leak journalism in starting public discussion has significance for democratic deliberation.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss2/7/journalismleaksnational securityglenn greenwaldnational security agencysecrecyedward snowdenstate secretssurveillance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca M. Rice
spellingShingle Rebecca M. Rice
Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
Secrecy and Society
journalism
leaks
national security
glenn greenwald
national security agency
secrecy
edward snowden
state secrets
surveillance
author_facet Rebecca M. Rice
author_sort Rebecca M. Rice
title Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
title_short Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
title_full Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
title_fullStr Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
title_full_unstemmed Questions of Professional Practice and Reporting on State Secrets: Glenn Greenwald and the NSA Leaks
title_sort questions of professional practice and reporting on state secrets: glenn greenwald and the nsa leaks
publisher SJSU Scholarworks
series Secrecy and Society
issn 2377-6188
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In 2013, journalist Glenn Greenwald met with Edward Snowden, who leaked the most documents in the history of the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). Greenwald reported on these documents and proved that the NSA spied on millions of American citizens. However, he also provided commentary about the state of journalism and argued that journalists are often complicit in the keeping of state secrets. Using a rhetorical analysis of Greenwald's writings in The Guardian and his later book, this essay argues that journalists function as a technical audience that debates professional standards for leaking secrets. In Greenwald's case, journalists were involved in the "re-secreting" of NSA behavior as they focused their coverage on Greenwald. This essay finds that secrets are communicatively revealed and concealed using different rhetorical appeals. In an age of political hostility toward journalists, the success of leak journalism in starting public discussion has significance for democratic deliberation.
topic journalism
leaks
national security
glenn greenwald
national security agency
secrecy
edward snowden
state secrets
surveillance
url https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss2/7/
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