These issues are available through Communication and Mass Media Complete on EbscoHost.

Vol. 21, Issue 1, Winter 2004

Ignacio E. Lozano: The Mexican Exile Publisher Who Conquered San Antonio and Los Angeles
By Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez

Depression in “The Promised Land”: The Chicago Defender Discourages Migration, 1929-1940
By Felecia G. Jones & Joseph P. McKerns

Carl Sandburg: Reporting for the People
By Duane Stolzfus

Bridging the Russian Cultural Gap: Language and Culture Wars in the Creation of a Soviet Peasant Press
By Hugh D. Hudson

 

Vol. 21, Issue 2, Spring 2004

The Art of Propaganda: Charles Alston’s World War II Editorial Cartoons for the Office of War Information and the Black Press
By Harry Amana

Visions of Violence: A Cartoon Study of America and War
By David R. Spencer

Drawing Swords: War in American Editorial Cartoons
By Lucy Shelton Caswell

Vol. 21, Issue 3, Summer 2004

Insiders’ Stories: Coping with Newsroom Stress: An Historical Perspective
By Fred Fedler

Nellie Bly’s Forgotten Stunt: As the First Woman to Cover a Championship Prize Fight, She Claimed to Have Gained Rare Access to Jack Dempsey
By Mike Sowell

The Overlooked Legend: The Failure of the Media to Report on the Lewis and Clark Expedition
By Carol Sue Humphrey

“Black Power”: Public Relations and Social Change in the 1960s
By Vanessa D. Murphree

 

Vol. 21, Issue 4, Fall 2004

“The Creation of a Right Public Spirit”: The Hampton Institute’s Pioneering Use of Sponsored Films, 1912-1917
By Nickieann Feeler

Tapping into War: Leveraging World War I in the Drive for a Dry Nation
By Margot Opdycke Lamme

Democratic Morality and the Freedom Academy Debate: A Conflict About Institutionalizing Propaganda in America, 1954-1968
By Stacey Cone

Creating the Corporate Citizen: Mobil Oil’s Editorial-Advocacy Campaign in The New York Times to Advance the Right and Practice of Corporate Political Speech, 1970-80
By Robert L. Kerr