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Vol. 17, Issue 1, Winter 2000

Imagining Mars: A Case Study in Photographic Realism
By Michael Brown

Reporting World War II for the Local Audience: Jack Shelley’s Experience as a Local Radio Reporter in the European Theater
By Chris W. Allen

Issues of Openness and Privacy: Press and Public Response to Betty Ford’s Breast Cancer
By Myra Gregory Knight

Journalism of the Suffrage Movement: 25 years of Recent Scholarship
By Elizabeth V. Burt

Great Ideas
“Innovative Teaching in Media History” Session at 1999 AJHA Convention Was Full of “Great Ideas”
Tamara K. Baldwin

 

Vol. 17, Issue 2, Spring 2000

The Rebels Yell: Conscription and Freedom of Expression in the Civil War South
By Debra Reddin van Tuyll

James Gillespie Birney, the Revival Spirit, and The Philanthropist
By Cathy Rogers Franklin

Courageous Performance: Examining Standards of Courage Among Small Town Investigative Reporters in the 1950s and 1960s
By Stephen A. Banning

Snarls Echoing ‘Round the World: The 1963 Birmingham Civil Rights Campaign on the World Stage
By Richard Lentz

Great Ideas
A Call for an International History of Journalism
By Mitchell Stephens

 

Vol. 17, Issue 3, Summer 2000

Discriminating Photographs from Hand-drawn Illustrations in Popular Magazines, 1895-1904
By Michael Brown

Self-Censorship by Coercion: The Federal Government and the California Japanese-Language Newspapers From Pearl Harbor to Internment
By Takeya Mizuno

Covering Contraception: Discourses of Gender, Motherhood and Sexuality in Women’s Magazines, 1938-1969
By Dolores Flamiano

Sports Page Boosterism: Atlanta and Its Newspapers Accomplish the Unprecedented
By William B. Anderson

Great Ideas
A Passion for Politics: A Conversation with Tom Brokaw
By Michael D. Murray

 

Vol. 17, Issue 4, Fall 2000

A Special Issue Devoted to The Buzz: Technology in Journalism and Mass Communication History
By David T. Z. Mindich, Guest Editor

Circuits: Getting a Better Picture
By Jon E. Hyde

The Click: Telegraphic Technology, Journalism, and the Transformation of the New York Associated Press
By Menahem Biondheitn

Circuits: The Noose and the Anti-Lynch Campaign
By Harry Amana

From Lemons to Lemonade: The Development of AP Wirephoto
By Jonathan Coopersmith

Circuits: The “Ballyhoo” of New Communication Technology
By Kathleen Endres

The Digital Watchdog’s First Byte:

Journalisms First Computer Analysis of Public Records
By Scott R. Maier

Circuits: A Wake-Up Call for Zombies: The Telegraph As Wayward Spark
By Paulette D. Kilmer

The Internet Moment and Past Moments: Four Points of View

Newspapers and Timeliness: The Impact of the Telegraph and the Internet
By Ford Risley

Fighting To Reclaim Lost Ground: The Internet and the Campaign for a National Labor Daily
By Jon Bekken

Re-Wired: The Internet and Cable Television
By William J. Leonhirth

Guest Essay
Journalism and Technology
By James W. Carey