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Vol. 10, Issue 1-2, Winter-Spring 1993
Sunday Newspapers and the Decline of Protestant Authority in the United States: Ministers Attempt to Defend the Sabbath
By John Ferre
Newsroom Managers and Workers: The Specialization of Editing Work — The Emergence of Newsroom Castes
By William S. Solomon
The Stagnation and Decline of Partisan Journalism in Late Nineteenth-Century America — Manton Marble and the New York World
By Jeffrey Rutenbeck
“This Paper Is Owned by Many Thousands of Workingmen and Women”: Contradictions of a Socialist Daily — The Rise and Fall of the Chicago Daily Socialist
By Jon Bekken
The Economics and Politics of Nineteenth-Century Newspapers: The Search for Markets in Detroit, 1865-1900
By Richard L. Kaplan
Science Versus Size: “Science” as a Keyword in the Newspaper Debate over Bare-Knuckle Prize Fighting — Class Warfare in the Sports Pages.
By Dennis Gildea
Vol. 10, Issue 3-4, Summer-Fall 1993
A special AJHA report: Doctoral Education in Media History
David Cassady: Introduction
William David Sloan: “Why Study Media History?”
Maurine Beasley and Douglas Ward: “What Should a Ph.D. Student in Media History Study?”
James Startt: “Historiography and the Media Historian”
David Nord: “A Diverse Field Needs a Diversity of Approaches”
Richard Kielbowicz: “On Making Connections With Outside Subfields”
Articles :
The Incorporation of Malcolm X
By Richard Lentz
Joseph Pulitzer as an American Hegelian
By Patricia Bradley
War as Monarchial Folly in the Early American Press
By Jeffery Smith