J&MC Quarterly Index – History

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: History

African Americans’ Criticisms Concerning African American Representations on Daytime Serials (Gloria Abernathy-Lear) 71:4, 830-839.

The American Woman Series: Gender and Class in The Ladies’ Home Journal, 1897 (Carolyn Kitch) 75:2, 243-262.

Beauty and the Beasts: Significance of Press Coverage of the 1913 National Suffrage Parade (Linda J. Lumsden) 77:3, 593-611.

The Birth of a Notion: Media Coverage of Contraception, 1915-1917 (Dolores Flamiano) 75:3, 560-571.

The Boston Gazette and Slavery as Revolutionary Propaganda (Patricia Bradley) 72:3, 581-596.

Celebrating the 75th Anniversary, Introduction (Jean Folkerts) 75:4, 687-688.

Celebrating the 75th Anniversary, Epilogue (Jean Folkerts) 75:4, 696-698.

Changing Theoretical Perspectives on Women’s Media Images: The Emergence of Patterns in a New Area of Historical Scholarship (Carolyn Kitch) 74:3, 477-489.

The Chicago Newspaper Scene: An Ecological Perspective (Jon Bekken) 74:3, 490-500.

Collusion and Price Fixing in the American Newspaper Industry: Market Preservation Trends, 1890-1910 (Edward E. Adams) 79:2, 416-426.

Courage of Convictions: The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the New York Times, and Reform of the Pure Food and Drug Act, 1933-1937 (Elizabeth M. Witherspoon) 75:4, 776-788.

Creating a Venue for the “Love that Dare Not Speak Its Name”: Origins of the Gay and Lesbian Press (Rodger Streitmatter) 72:2, 436-447.

“A Death in the American Family”: Myth, Memory, and National Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr. (Carolyn Kitch) 79:2, 294-309.

“Delays and Vexation”: Jack London and the Russo-Japanese War (Michael S. Sweeney) 75:3, 548-559.

A Disappearing Enemy: The Image of the United States in Soviet Political Cartoons (Jonathan A. Becker) 73:3, 609-619.

Editorial Rights of Telephone Carriers (Patrick O’Neill) 71:1, 99-109.

Establishment of the Quarterly (Guido Stempel) 75:4, 691-694.

Evelyn Waugh’s Scoop: The Facts behind the Fiction (Michael B. Salwen) 78:1, 150-171.

Explaining the Little Bighorn: Race and Progress in the Native Press (John M. Coward) 71:3, 540-549.

The Financial Affairs of Wisconsin and Iowa Weekly Newspapers in 1860: An Analysis of Products of Industry Census Data (Carolyn Stewart Dyer and Douglas B. Adams) 71:2, 370-379.

The “Forgotten” 1918 Influenza Epidemic and Press Portrayal of Public Anxiety (Janice Hume) 77:4, 898-915.

The Future of the Internet: A Historical Perspective (David T. Z. Mindich) 75:1, 7-8.

Government Suppression of the Japanese Language in World War II Assembly Camps (Takeya Mizuno) 80:4, 849-865.

Hearst, Roosevelt, and the Muckrake Speech of 1906: A New Perspective (Mark Neuzil) 73:1, 29-39.

The Ideology, Rhetoric, and Organizational Structure of a Countermovement Publication: The Remonstrance, 1890-1920 (Elizabeth V. Burt) 75:1, 69-83.

Images of Rosie: A Content Analysis of Women Workers in American Magazine Advertising, 1940-1946 (Charles Lewis and John Neville) 72:1, 216-227.

The Internet and Continuing Historical Discourse (Hazel Dicken-Garcia) 75:1, 19-27.

L’affaire Jake Powell: The Minority Press Goes to Bat against Segregated Baseball (Chris Lamb) 76:1, 21-34.

Latest from the Canadian Revolution: Early War Correspondence in the New York Herald (Jonas Bjork) 71:4, 851-859.

“Madstones,” Clever Toads, and Killer Tarantulas (Fairy-Tale Briefs in Wild West Newspapers) (Paulette D. Kilmer) 78:4, 816-835.

Minnesota Publishers and Editors As Elected Officials, 1923-1938: A Comparison of Journalistic Rhetoric and Conduct (Patricia L.Dooley) 71:1, 64-75.

Myth in Charles Kuralt’s “On the Road” (Matthew C. Ehrlich) 79:2, 327-338.

The Nativist Press: Demonizing the American Immigrant (Rodger Streitmatter) 76:4, 673-683.

News before Newspapers (Richard Streckfuss) 75:1, 84-97.

Newspaper Trends in the 1870s: Proliferation, Popularization, and Political Independence (Jeffrey B. Rutenbeck) 72:2, 361-375.

Not Likely Sent: The Remington-Hearst “Telegrams” (W. Joseph Campbell) 77:2, 405-422.

Popular Propaganda: The Food Administration in World War I (Stephen Ponder) 72:3, 539-550.

Preserving the Community: Cleveland Black Papers’ Response to the Great Migration (Felicia G. Jones Ross) 71:3, 531-539.

Press Freedom in Liberia, 1830 to 1847: The Impact of Heterogeneity and Modernity (Carl Patrick Burrowes) 74:2, 331-347.

The Press Response to the Corps of Discovery: The Making of Heroes in an Egalitarian Age (Betty Houchin Winfield) 80:4, 866-883.

Quelling Radio’s Quacks: The FCC’s First Public-Interest Programming Campaign (F. Leslie Smith) 71:3, 594-608.

Rethinking TV History (Douglas Gomery) 74:3, 501-514.

The Rise and Fall of the World Economic Herald, 1980-1989 (Jinguo Shen) 72:3, 642-653.

Secret Combinations and Collusive Agreements: The Scripps Newspaper Empire and the Early Roots of Joint Operating Agreements (Edward E. Adams) 73:1, 195-205.

Social Construction of Three Influenza Pandemics in the New York Times (Debra E. Blakely) 80:4, 884-902.

“Spectacles of the Poor”: Conventions of Alternative News (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 75:1, 177-193.

Suffragist: The Making of a Militant (Linda Lumsden) 72:3, 525-538.

Syndicated Service Dependence and a Lack of Commitment to Localism: Scripps Newspapers and Market Subordination (Edward E. Adams and Gerald J. Baldasty) 78:3, 519-532.

Talking with a Dinosaur (Wayne Danielson) 75:4, 689-691.

They Liked Ike: Pro-Eisenhower Publishers and His Decision to Run for President (Douglass K. Daniel) 77:2, 393-404.

Toward a Troubleshooting Manual for Journalism History (Michael Schudson) 74:3, 463-476.

Transition and Change (Donald Shaw) 75:4, 694-696.

When Publishers Invited Federal Regulation to Curb Circulation Abuses (Linda Lawson) 71:1, 110-120.

“Who Was ‘Shadow’?” The Computer Knows: Applying Grammar-Program Statistics in Content Analyses to Solve Mysteries about Authorship (Barbara G. Ellis and Steven J. Dick) 73:4, 947-962.

The Wisconsin Press and Woman Suffrage, 1911-1919: An Analysis of Factors Affecting Coverage by Ten Diverse Newspapers (Elizabeth V. Burt) 73:3, 620-634.

Women’s Pages or People’s Pages: The Production of News for Women in the Washington Post in the 1950s (Mei-Ling Yang) 73:2, 364-378.

“You’re a Tough Guy, Mary – And a First-Rate Newspaperman”: Gender and Women Journalists in the 1920s and 1930s (Linda Lumsden) 72:4, 913-921.

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