Vol. 11

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 11, Issue 1, Winter 1994

Research Notes:
Lucy Shelton Caswell: The Ohio State CGA Collection; INKS: A New Journal for Cartoon and Comic Art Studies

Articles:

Hemingway as Negligent Reporter: New Masses and the 1935 Florida Hurricane
By S. L. Harrison

Realities and Possibilities: The Lives of Women in Periodicals of the New Republic
By Karen K. List

Misconceptions and Criminal Prosecutions: Theodore Roosevelt and the Panama Canal Libels
By Robert L. Spellman

Delilah Beasley: A Black Woman Who Lifted as She Climbed
By Rodger Streitmatter

Vol. 11, Issue 2, Spring 1994

The Commercial Roots of Foreign Correspondence: The New York Herald and Foreign News, 1835-1839
By Ulf Jonas Bjork

The Journalism of Josephine Herbst
By Robert L. Craig

Free Speech Without an ‘If’ or a ‘But’: The Defense of Free Expression in the Radical Periodicals of Home, Washington, 1897-1912
By Nathaniel Hong

‘The most dangerous of all Negro journals’:Federal Efforts to Suppress the Chicago Defender During World War 1
By Theodore Kornweibel Jr.

Research Notes
Fenwick Anderson: The Little Echo That Roared

Vol. 11, Issue 3, Summer 1994

Things That Speak to the Eye: The Photographs of Charities, 1897-1909
By Beverly M. Bethune

‘A Receipt Against the Plague’: Medical Reporting in Colonial America
By David A. Copeland

The Mid-Week Pictorial: Forerunner of American News-Picture Magazines
By Keith R. Kenney and Brent W. linger:

Presidential Publicity and Executive Power: Woodrow Wilson and the Centralizing of Governmental Information
By Stephen Ponder

Research Notes
William Stintson: Westbrook Pegler: Brat of the Whole Neighborhood

A ‘Wallbreaking’ Begins Work on Freedom Forum’s Newseum

Vol. 11, Issue 4, Fall 1994

The Professional Vision: Conflicts over Journalism Education, 1900-1955
By Brad Asher

Do You Belong in Journalism?: Definitions of the Ideal Journalist in Career Guidance Books
By Linda Steiner

Charlotte Perkins Oilman, William Randolph Hearst, and the Practice of Ethical Journalism
By Denise D. Knight

The Jazz Rage: Carter G. Woodson’s Culture War in the African-American Press
By Leonard Ray Teel

Research Notes
Robert G. Spellman: The Blue Pencil Gang

E. G. Palmegiano: The Newark Public Library: Unexpected Haven for Mass Media Historians

Vol. 12

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 12, Issue 1, Winter 1995

From Pity to Necessity: How National Events Shaped Coverage of the Plains Indian War
By Patricia A. Curtin:

‘News in Which the Public May Take An Interest’: A Nineteenth Century Precedent for New York Times v. Sullivan
By Richard Digby-Junger

Archibald Grimke: Radical Writer in a Conservative Age
By Roger Schuppert

Research Notes
William Stimson: Clarity as a ‘Linguistic Theory’

Keith Kenney: Research for Visual Communicators

Vol. 12, Issue 2,

Spring 1995

The Proceedings of the Rebellious Negroes: News of Slave Insurrections and Crimes in Colonial Newspapers
By David A. Copeland

The Brownsville Affair and the Political Values of Cleveland Black Newspapers
By Felicia G. Jones Ross

The Conservationist as Journalist: P.S. Lovejoy and the fight for the Cutover
By James A. Kates

The Lesbian and Gay Press: Raising a Militant Voice in the 1960s
By Rodger Streitmatter

Dorothy Thompson as “Liberal Conservative” columnist: Gender, Politics, and Journalistic Authority
By Loretta Sec

Vol. 12, Issue 3, Summer 1995

Daily Newspaper Advertising Trends During World War II: IRS Tax Rulings and the War Bond Drives
By Edward E. Adams and Rajiv Sekhri

American Armed Forces Newspapers During World War II
By Alfred E. Cornebise

Press Coverage of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team (Separate Nisei): A Case Study in Agenda Building
By Patricia A. Curtin

Following A Famous President: Truman’s Troubles with an Independent Minded Post-War Press
By Bruce J. Evensen

Mother and Son: Gender, Class, and War Propaganda in Canada, 1939-1945
By Barbara M. Freeman

Part of the Team: LIFE Photographers and Their Symbiotic Relationship with the Military During World War II
By Andrew Mendelson and C. Zoe Smith

Television During World War II: Homefront Service, Military Success
By James A. Von Schilling

Selling Patriotism: The Representation of Women in Magazine Advertising in World War II
By Mei-ling Yang

Historiographic Essays
Women and Journalism in World War II: Discrimination and Progress
By Maurine Beasley

World War II American Radio Is More Than Murrow
By Louise Benjamin

Freedom of the Press in World War II
By Margaret A. Blanchard

The Black Press: Homefront Clout Hits A Peak in World War II
By Patrick S. Washburn

Shhh, Do Tell! World War II and Press-Government Scholarship
By Betty Houchin Winfield and Janice Hume

Research Note
Arthur J. Kaul: The Conscientious Objection of Lew Ayres

Research Essay
Reflections on the Role of the Press in the Foreign Policy Aims of Adolf Hitler
By Frank McDonough

Vol. 12, Issue 4, Fall 1995

The Early Years of IRE: The Evolution of Modern Investigative Journalism
By James L. Aucoin

Rediscovering Zona Gale, Journalist
By Elizabeth Burt

Nothing More, Nothing Less: Case Law Leading to the Freedom of Information Act
By Paul E. Kostyu

‘Our Single Remedy for All Ills’: The History of the Idea of a National Press Council
By Roger Simpson

Research Essay
Edna Ferber’s Journalistic Roots
By John Stevens

Vol. 13

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 13, Issue 1, Winter 1996

George Seldes: Propaganda Analyst, Press Gadfly
By Patrick Daley

‘The Glorious Publick Virtue so Predominant in Our Rising Country’: Benjamin Franklin’s Printing Network During the Revolutionary Era
By Ralph Frasca

Madison Misinterpreted: Historical Presentism Skews Scholarship
By Paul H. Gates Jr. and Bill F. Chamberlin

The Editor as Politician: W.R. Ronald and the Agricultural Act of 1930
By Elizabeth Evenson Williams

Research Essay
Mencken: Magnificent Anachronism?
By S.L. Harrison

Vol. 13, Issue 2, Spring 1996

The Doctor’s Son Covers a Euthenasia Trial: John O’Hara The Journalist
By R. Thomas Berner

Forerunner of the ‘Dark Ages’: Philadelphia’s Tradition of a Partisan Press
By Patricia Bradley

News: Public Service or Profitable Property?
By Barbara Cloud

Ike’s Red Scare: The Harry Dexter White Crisis
By David W. Guth

‘Killing Me Softly’? The Newspaper Press and the Reporting on the Search for a more Humane Execution Technology
By Marlin Shipman

Research Essays
Sex, Lies, and Autobiography: Contributions of Life Study to Journalism History
By Linda Steiner, Michael Robertson, Thomas Connery and Rodger Streitmatter

The Uses of History: The Media History Project
By Kristina Ross

Vol. 13, Issue 3, Summer 1996

Who Seeks the Truth Should Be of No Country: The British and American Press Report the Boxer Rebellion, June 1900
By Jane Elliott

The Courage to Call Things by Their Right Names’: Fanny Fern, Feminine Sympathy, and Feminist Issues in Nineteenth-Century American Journalism
By Carolyn L. Kitch

Crosses Before a Government Vampire: How Four Newspapers Addressed the First Amendment in Editorials, 1962-1991
By James B. McPherson

‘Typical Slime By Joe McCarthy’: Ralph McGill and Anti-McCarthyism in the South
By Karen S. Miller

‘Right in the Furhrer’s Face’: American Editorial Cartoons of the World War II Period
By Paul Somers

Research Essay
Legacy of Fear: Japan-Bashing in Contemporary American Film
By Jan Whitt

Vol. 13, Issue 4, Fall 1996

In All the Papers: Reporting on Religion in Colonial America
By David Copeland

Agnes Smedley: A Radical Journalist in Search of a Cause
By Karla K. Gower

Ishbel Ross, From Bonar Bridge to Manhattan: The Gaelic Beginnings of an American Reporter
By Beverly G. Merrick

The Rhetoric of Independence and Boosterism in Late Nineteenth-Century California Journalism
By Jeff Rutenbeck

Research Essay
In Defense of Historiographic Parochialism
By Ralph Frasca

Vol. 14

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 14, Issue 1, Winter 1997

Promoting the Progressive Indian: Lee Harkins and The American Indian Magazine
By John M. Coward

James Lawrence Fly’s Fight for a Free Marketplace of Ideas
By Mickie Edwardson

Caro Brown and the Duke of Duval: The Story of the First Woman to Win the Pulitzer Prize for Reporting
By Robert Jones and Louis K. Falk

The Founding of Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. and the Arizona Project: The Most Significant Post-Watergate Development in U.S. Investigative Journalism
By Maria Marron

Foreign Embassies in the United States as Communist Propaganda Sources: 1945-1960
By Alex Nagy

Essay Review
Journalism History Goes Interactive at the Newseum
By Rodger Streitmatter

Research Essay
The Black Press and the 1936 Olympics
By John D. Stevens

Vol. 14, Issue 2, Spring 1997

The Role of the Black Press in the 1923 Trial of Marcus Mosiah Garvey
By Julette B. Carter

Choosing a Team for Democracy: Henry R. Luce and the Commission on Freedom of the Press
By Jane S. McConnell

That Delightful Relationship: Presidents and White House Correspondents in the 1920s
By Stephen Ponder

Type and Stereotype: Frederic E. Lockley, Pioneer Journalist
By Charles E. Rankin

Research Essays and Notes
The Joseph Medill Patterson Papers: A Publisher’s View of the Early 20th Century
By Alfred Lawrence Lorenz

The Jhistorian Online
By David T.Z. Mindich, Elliot King, Barbara Straus Reed, and David Abrahamson

The World of Change in TV News: A Conversation with Garrick Utley
By Michael D. Murray

Vol. 14, Issue 3 & 4, Summer/Fall 1997

Introductory Essay: The Shifting Paradigms of Investigative Journalism in the 20th Century
By Frederick Blevens

Women and the “Larger Household”: The “Big Six” and Muckraking
By Kathleen L. Endres

Avenging Angel or Deceitful Devil?: The Development of Drew Pearson, a New Kind of Investigative Journalist
By Steve Weinberg

Dante’s Watergate: All the President’s Men as a Romance Narrative
By Mark Hunter

Essays
The Investigative Tradition in American Journalism
By James L. Aucoin

More than Muckraking: Women and Municipal Housekeeping Journalism
By Agnes Hooper Gottlieb

Muckraking: A Term Worth Redefining
By Kathleen L. Endres

Other Research Articles
Journalist Mark Ethridge’s Diplomatic Missions in Post- World War II Europe: The Making of a Cold Warrior
By Morgan David Arant Jr.

Sketches of Life and Society: Horace Greeley’s Vision for Foreign Correspondence
By Ulf Jonas Bjork

Sending Bundles of Hope: The Use of Female Celebrities in Bundles for Britain’s Public Relations Campaign
By Anelia Dimitrova

Exploring the Historical Image of Journalists as Heavy Drinkers from 1850-1950
By Fred Fedler

Mass-Produced Reform: Henry Ford’s Dearborn Independent
By James Foust

The Work that Came Before the Art: Willa Cather as Journalist, 1893-1912
By Carolyn Kitch

Unequal Partners: Gender Relationships in Victorian Radical Journalism
By David R. Spencer

Margaret Schofield Wang: Opening a Window on a Different China
By Rodger Streitmatter

Oh, That Proper Mix: Selective Boosterism on the North Idaho Mining Frontier Society
By David J. Vergobbi

Magazine Coverage of First Ladies from Hoover to Clinton from Election Through the First One Hundred Days in Office
By Liz Watts

Research Essays
Field, F.P.A., and Lardner: Notable Newspaper Columnists
By S.L. Harrison

An Historical Overview of The Doctors Syndicated Columnists from Dr. William Brady to Dr. George Crane
By Richard Weiner

Vol. 15

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 15, Issue 1, Winter 1998

The Press under Pressure: How Georgia’s Newspapers Responded to Civil War Constraints
By Cal M, Logue, Eugene F. Miller and Christopher J. Schroll

Peter W. Alexander: Confederate Chronicler & Conscience
By Ford Risley

George T. Ruby: Reconstruction Politician/Journalist
By Donna L. Dickerson

Window on Washington in 1850: Tracking Newspaper Letter-Writers
By Mark Stegmaier

The Whitechapel Club: Defining Chicago’s Newspapermen in the 1890s
By Alfred Lawrence Lorenz

Great Ideas
Searching For Journalism History in Cyberspace
David T. Z. Mindich

Vol. 15, Issue 2, Spring 1998

John Wanamaker’s “Temple of Patriotism” Defines Early 20th Century Advertising and Brochures
By Patricia Bradley

“Gospel of Fearlessness” or “Outright Lies”: A Historical Examination of Magazine Letters to the Editor, 1902-1912 and 1982-1992
By Brian Thornton

Strategic Competition and the Photographer’s Work: Photojournalism in Gannett Newspapers, 1937-1947
By Bonnie Brennen

The American Hero and The Evolution of the Human Interest Story
By Betty Houchin Winfield and Janice Hume

Great Ideas
Extra! Extra! Pennsylvania’s Tim Hughes Offers Old and Rare Newspapers for Sale
By Michael R. Smith

Vol. 15, Issue 3, Summer 1998

A Collective Biography of Editors of U.S. Workers’ Papers: 1913 & 1925
By Jon Bekken

Constructing History: Artists, Urban Culture and the Image of Newspapers in 1930s America
By Hanno Hardt

Bringing Down Giants: Thomas Nast, John Wilson Bengough
and the Maturing of Political Cartooning
By David R. Spencer

Stories of Quitting: Why Did Women Journalists Leave the Newsroom?
By Linda Steiner

Vol. 15, Issue 4, Fall 1998

From Ridicule to Respect: Newspapers’ Reaction To Television, 1948-1960
By David R. Davies

Virginias Dabney and Lenoir Chambers: Two Southern Liberal Newspaper Editors Face Virginias Massive Resistance to Public School Integration
By Alex Leidholdt

How World Vision Rose From Obscurity To Prominence: Television Fundraising, 1972-1982
By Ken Waters

Selling Cable Television in the 1970s and 1980s: Social Dreams and Business Schemes
By William J. Leonhirth

The Press Held Hostage: Terrorism in a Small North Carolina Town
By Oscar Patterson III

Great Ideas
What’s Mock News? A Case Study of Dino Times and NYTWNews
By John Osburn

Vol. 16

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 16, Issue 1, Winter 1999

“Truth Is Our Ultimate Goal”: A Mid-19th Century Concern for Journalism Ethics
By Stephen A. Banning

From Populist to Patrician: Edward H. Butler’s Buffalo News and the Crisis of Labor, 1877-1892
By Michael J. Dillon

Power of the Press: How Newspapers in Four Communities Erased Thousands of Chinese From Oregon History
By Herman B. Chiu

Common Forms for Uncommon Actions: The Search for Political Organization in California’s Dust Bowl
By James Hamilton

Great Ideas
E. W. Scripps Papers Provide An Important Journalistic Window for Scholars
By Gerald J. Baldasty

Vol. 16, Issue 2, Spring 1999

“Those Who Toil and Spin”: Female Textile Operatives’ Publications in New England and the Response to Working Conditions, 1840-1850
By Mary M. Cronin

Dissent and Control in a Woman Suffrage Periodical: 30 Years of the Wisconsin Citizen
By Elizabeth V. Burt

Flying Around the World in 1889 —In Search of the Archetypal Wanderer
By Paulette D. Kilmer

“There is Nothing in This Profession . . . That a Woman Cannot Do” : Doris E. Fleischman and the Beginnings of Public Relations
By Susan Henry

Great Ideas
Rethinking Objectivity in Journalism and History: What Can We Learn from Feminist Theory and Practice?
By Carolyn Kitch

Vol. 16, Issue 3, Summer 1999

“In Common with Colored Men, I Have Certain Sentiments”: Black Nationalism and Hilary Teage of the Liberia Herald
By Carl Patrick Burrowes

Women’s Moral Reform Periodicals of the 19th Century: A Cultural Feminist Analysis of The Advocate
By Therese Lueck

Redefining Racism: Newspaper Justification for the 1924 Exclusion of Japanese Immigrants
By Bradley J. Hamm

Project Chariot, Nuclear Zeal, Easy Journalism and the Fate of Eskimos
By John Merton Marrs

Great Ideas
My Newspaper is Older Than Your Newspaper
By Michael R. Smith

Vol. 16, Issue 4, Fall 1999

Conservative Media: A Different Kind of Diversity
By Rodger Streitmatter, Guest Editor

The Savannah Morning News As a Penny Paper: Independent, But Hardly Neutral
By Ford Risley

“One of the fine figures of American journalism”: A Closer Look at Josephus Daniels of the Raleigh News and Observer
By W. Joseph Campbell

Family Pictures: Constructing the “Typical” American in 1920s Magazines
By Carolyn Kitch

Conserving Racial Segregation in 1954: Brown v. Board of Education and the Mississippi Daily Press
By Susan Weill

Vol. 17

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

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 And purchased skin looks. Hair

Guest Essay
Journalism and Technology
By James W. Carey

Vol. 18

This volume is available for free access at Archive.org.

Vol. 18, Issue 1, Winter 2001

Whose History Does Journalism Tell? Considering Women’s Absence from the Story of the Century
By Carolyn Kitch

The Enemy Within: Journalism, the State, and the Limits of Dissent in Cold War Britain, 1950-1951
By John Jenks

Learn to Swear: Women in Journalistic Careers,1850-1926
By Agnes Hooper Gottlieb

The Trials of Faith: Discussion of Religion and the Beecher Adultery Scandal, 1870-1880
By Alan Bjerga

Vol. 18, Issue 2, Spring 2001

Centralized Control in Newspaper Chains: E.W. Scripps and the Newspaper Enterprise Association, 1902-1908
By Gerald J. Baldasty

Pioneering for Women Journalists: Boston’s Sallie Joy White
By Elizabeth V.Burt

Open-Ended Oratory: Fanny Fern’s Use of the Periodical as a Rhetorical Platform
By Elizabethada A. Wright

Trying Television: WKOW-TV in the 1950s
By Kathryn B. Campbell

Vol. 18, Issue 3, Summer 2001

Furious Desires and Victorious Careers: Doris E. Fleischman, Counsel on Public Relations and Advocate for Working Women
By Margot Opdycke Lamme

The Great White Father and the Antichrist: Bud Wilkinson’s Football Letter as Cultural History
By Robert L. Kerr

Science Journalism and the Construction of News: How the Print Media Framed the 1918 Influenza Epidemic
By Meg Spratt

Sensation and the Century: How Four New York Dailies Covered the End of the Century
By Randall S. Sumpter

Vol. 18, Issue 4, Fall 2001

“Sweet is the Tale”: A Context for the New York Sun’s Moon Hoax
By Ulf Jonas Bjork

“Cossacks Marching to Berlin!”: A New Look at French Journalism during the First World War
By Ross F. Collins

Creating Myth and Legend: O.B. Keeior and Bobby Jones
By Robin Hardin

Hazel Brannon Smith: Pursuing Truth at Her Peril
By Matthew J. Bosisio

 

Vol. 19

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

Vol. 19, Issue 1, Winter 2002

The Next Twenty Years
By David A. Copeland

A Nod From Destiny: How Sportswriters for White and African-American Newspapers Covered Kenny Washington’s Entry into the National Football League.
By Ronald Bishop

The Buccaneer as Cultural Metaphor: Pirate Coverage in Nineteenth-Century American Periodicals.
By Janice Hume

“Press Every Angle”: FBI Public Relations and the “Smear Campaign” of 1958.
By Matthew Cecil

From OWI to USIA: The Jackson Committee’s Search for the Real “Voice” of America.
By David W. Guth

Vol. 19, Issue 2, Spring 2002

Cultural Voices or Pure Propaganda?: Publications of the Carlisle Indian School, 1879-1918.
By Beth A. Haller

Mixing Protest and Accommodation: The Response of Oklahoma’s Black Town Newspaper Editors to Race Relations, 1891-1918.
By Mary M. Cronin

A Common Purpose: The Negro Newspaper Publishers Association’s Fight for Equality During World War II.
By Earnest L. Perry

Pounding Brass for the Associated Press: Delivering News by Telegraph in a Pre-Teletype Era.
By J. Steven Smethers

Vol. 19, Issue 3, Summer 2002

“Beatlepeople”: Gramsci, The Beatles, and Rolling Stone Magazine.
By Michael R. Frontani

Specter of Stalemate: Vietnam War Perspectives in Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News & World Report, 1965-1968
By James Landers

Broadcast Segregation: WJTV’S Early Years
By Julian Williams

Saviors or Scalawags: The Mississippi Black Press’s Contrasting Coverage of Civil Rights Workers and Freedom Summer, June-August 1964
By Jinx C. Broussard

Vol. 19, Issue 4, Autumn 2002

“From Blueprint to Reality”: The Dubuque Leader’s Transformation Under Cooperative Ownership
By James F. Tracy

Not a Hoax: New Evidence in the New York Journal’s Rescue of Evangelina Cisneros
By W. Joseph Campbell

“Securing the Affections of Those People at this Critical Juncture”: Newspapers, Native Americans, and the French and Indian War, 1754-1763
By David A. Copeland

Mary Church Terrell: A Black Woman Journalist and Activist Seeks to Elevate Her Race
By Jinx C. Broussard

Vol. 20

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

Vol. 20, Issue 1, Winter 2003

The New York Tribune At Harper’s Ferry: “Horace Greeley on Trial”
By Gregory Borchard

The Student Voice: “Purging the Rabies of Racism”
By Vanessa D. Murphree

“Mobocratic Feeling”: Religious Outsiders, the Popular Press, and the American West
By Todd Kerstetter

Gobind Behari Lal: The Gentle Indian Firebrand of American Science Journalism
By Padmini Patwardhan

Vol. 20, Issue 2, Spring 2003

The Warren Report’s Forgotten Chapter: Press Response to Criticism of Kennedy Assassination Coverage
By Glen Feighery

‘Satanic Journalism and its Fate’:The Scripps Chain Strikes Out in Buffalo
By Michael Dillon

A Press Insider’s View of Reconstruction Era Journalism in Washington, D.C., 1865-1877
By Joseph P. McKerns

Selling the Southwestern Indian: Ideology and Image in Arizona Highways, 1925-1940
By John M. Coward

Vol. 20, Issue 3, Summer 2003

Blackface in Black and White: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in Frederick Douglass’ Hometown Newspapers, 1847
By Frank E. Fee, Jr.

The Famine Irish and the Irish-American Press: Strangers in a Hostile Land
By Mick Mulcrone

We Want In: The African American Press’s Negotiation for a White House Correspondent
By Earnest Perry

Jacob Riis: Immigrants Old and New, and the Making of Americans
By Joseph P. Cosco

Vol. 20, Issue 4, Fall 2003

Like Newsroom, Like Classroom: Women Journalism Educators Temper the Times
By Therese L. Lueck

Heralding Economic and Political Independence: Danville, Virginia’s Newspaper Editors Adopt James Gordon Bennett’s Penny Press Model During the Civil War
By Stephen V. Bird

Two Steps Forward and One Step Back: Coverage of Women Journalists in Editor & Publisher 1978 through 1988
By Cindy Elmore

An Emerging Emphasis on Image: Early Press Coverage of Politics and Television
By David A. Biard