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Vol. 9, Issue 1, Winter-Spring 1992
Stephen Crane’s New York City Journalism and the Oft-Told Tale — Literary Journalism ii\ the Daily Newspaper
By Michael Robertson
“Trifling with Edge Tools”: Henry Adams’s Letters to the New York Times,
1861-62 — Reporting on Diplomacy from the Inside
By John C. Bromley
Tough Talk and Bad News: Satire and the New York Herald,1835-1860 — James Gordon Bennett as a Neoclassicist.
By Gary L. Whitby
James Agee’s Documentary Expression: Let Us Now Praise Famous Men as Journalism — A Second Look at a Classic Work of Journalism
Edna Boone Johnson and Mary Helen Brown
In the Wake of the News: The Beginnings of a Sports Column, by HEK — Sportswriting as a Literary Art
By Alfred Lawrence Lorenz
Historiographical Essay
Re-Viewing Rock Writing: The Origins of Popular Music Criticism Telling the Story of Rock ‘n’ Roll
By Steve Jones
Vol. 9, Issue 2, Summer-Fall 1992
Hojas Volantes: The Beginning of Print Journalism in the Americas
By Victoria Goff
Greater Distance = Declining Interest: Massachusetts Printers and Protections for a Free Press, 1783-1791
By Carol Sue Humphrey
“To Avoid the Coming Storm”: Hezekiah Niles’ Weekly Register as a Voice of North-South Moderation, 1811-1836
By Bill Kovarik
Searching for the Social Construction of Radio
By Tom Volek
“Up in the Air”: Re-considering the Cultural Origins of Broadcasting and the Myth of Entertainment During the 1920s
By Elaine Prostak Berland
Books and Radio: Culture and Technology in the 1920s and 1930s
By Ann Haugland
New York City’s Municipal Broadcasting Experiment: WNYC, 1922-1940
By Alan G. Stavitsky
The Social Origins of Broadcasting: Canada, 1919-1945
By David Spencer
Origins, Paradigms, and Topographies Methodological Considerations Regarding Area Studies and Broadcast Histories
By James Schwoch
Ronald Reagan and Freedom of Expression: From Liberal to Industry Spokesman, 1945-1952
By Stephen Vaughn
Donna Allen and the Women’s Institute: A Feminist Perspective on the First Amendment
By Maurine H. Beasley