These issues are available through Communication and Mass Media Complete on EbscoHost.
Vol. 26, Issue 1, Winter 2009
In Their Own Voices: Women Redefine and Frame Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
By Kathleen Endres
Death and Communists: The Funeral Industry’s Attack on Jessica Mitford’s “The American Way of Death”
By Sharon Crook West & Joseph P. McKerns
“Ebony”’s Era Bell Thompson Travels the World To Tell the Story
By Jinx Coleman Broussard & Skye Chance Cooley
The State of Public Relations History
By Margot Opdycke Lamme, Jacquie L’Etang, & Burton St. John
The Historiography of Journalism History: Part 1: “An Overview”
By Chris Daly
The Historiography of Journalism History: Part 2: “Toward a New Theory”
By Chris Daly
Vol. 26, Issue 2, Spring 2009
A ‘Race’ for Equality: Print Media Coverage of the 1968 Olympic Protest by Tommie Smith and John Carlos
By Jason Peterson
“Rebellion in the Kingdom of Swat”: Sportswriters, African American Athletes, and Coverage of Curt Flood’s Lawsuit against Major League Baseball
By William Gillis
Hero Crafting in “Sporting Life”, an Early Baseball Journal
By Lori Amber Roessner
Sport as Cultural Assimilation: Representations of American Indian Athletes in the Carlisle School Newspaper
By Ray Gamache
“A Dozen Best”:Top Books for the Journalism Historian Exploring the History of the Book
By Kathy Roberts Forde
Vol. 26, Issue 3, Summer 2009
Oral History Project: An Interview with Patrick Washburn, Seattle, Washington, October, 2009
By Reed Smith
“The Guiding Spirit”: Philip Loeb, The Battle for Television Jurisdiction, and the Broadcasting Industry Blacklist
By Glenn D. Smith
Editor A.D. Griffin: Envisioning a New Age for Black Oregonians (1896-1907)
By Kimberley Mangun
The Extemporaneous Newscast: The Lasting Impact of Walter Cronkite’s Local Television News Experiment
By Mike Conway
“Little More than Minutes”: How Two Wyoming Community Newspapers Covered the Construction of the Heart Mountain Internment Camp
By Ronald Bishop
“A Dozen Best” Essential Readings in Journalism
By Elliot King & Jane Chapman
Vol. 26, Issue 4, Fall 2009
The President’s Editor: John W. Forney of the Press and Morning Chronicle
By Ford Risley
Fiend, Coward, Monster, or King: Southern Press Views of Abraham Lincoln
By Mary M. Cronin
Abraham Lincoln and Press Suppression Reconsidered
By David W. Bulla
“A Dozen Best”: Top Books on Presidents and the News Media
By James E. Muller
Lincoln’s Other War: Public Opinion, Press Issues, and Personal Pleas
By Jeffery A. Smith