I have a new article out today (online first, at least), with @JHistoryJournal, focus on the materiality of paper and its survival into our more digital (but still paper-using) present: https://t.co/g2UA4Sakgs
Congrats to the five media historians receiving funding to support their diversity and media history research! The microgrants are sponsored by the @AEJHistory and AJHA as part of a collaborative effort to stimulate more diversity research in @JHistoryJournal and @AJMediaHistory.
We have many terrific reviewers and it's time they get some recognition. Congratulations to Maurine Beasley, our 2025 Reilly Award winner! She is not only a dedicated reviewer, but she is also one of our top published authors! https://t.co/6zBhIvxd3X
Exciting news! We'll publish a special issue on #MediaLiteracy, Mis/Disinformation Research, and the Institute for Propaganda Analysis. Please consider submitting! Abstract deadline is May 1. More here: https://t.co/5FXYrtXN85
We are devastated. Pam Parry, our former editor, has died. Teri Finneman, former Pub Committee Chair, summed it up: “This is an incalculable loss for our field." Pam was a colleague, friend, and mentor to so many of us.
Today we celebrate Ethel Payne, a monumental journalist in journalism history, for #BlackHistoryMonth Learn about the First Lady of the Black press in this throwback episode. https://t.co/5aSjWo2oe5
@michiganstateu's Ed Timke won the 2024/2025 essay contest. Jennifer Martin (Deakin University, Australia) and @kimvoss (@UCF ) tied for 2nd. Honorable mentions include @OtavioDaros, @jasonleeguthrie, @matt_pressman, @ckaradjov. More here:
https://t.co/hy7jSbnpla
Congrats to Karen Miller Russell, who is our 2024 Journalism History podcast guest of the year, for her episode PR and Crime Novels. https://t.co/9p2WeD3s9J
We have a great opportunity to get published! Looking for scholarly essays exploring historical construction & development of professional journalism norms & practices across cultural, generational, or national contexts. $$$ for top essay! More info: https://t.co/qXtfbSVk7F
Last open access article to celebrate our 50th anniversary! Only fitting we go back to the first issue. Here's James W. Carey’s, “The Problem of Journalism History.” Enjoy the reading and submit your research to us! #journalism#media#mediahistory
https://t.co/KkBxXHd376
Our final episode is now live. We thank our fans so much for their support over the past six years. We will still feature the 2024 book award winner next August as a bonus episode, but for one last time until then: Good night and good luck. - Teri
https://t.co/XHNGPfjnUd
Looking for a #podcast recommendation for #Thanksgiving2024 travel? Hit up the Journalism History podcast with over 150 shows. A podcast that rips out the pages of your history books to re-examine the stories you thought you knew and the ones you were never told. @podbean
In our latest episode, Kathryn Olmsted discusses her book, The Newspaper Axis: Six Press Barons Who Enabled Hitler, and how anti-interventionist attitudes by publishers hindered the U.S. and British responses to Hitler's rise to power. https://t.co/jFyijhn1i3
It's officially the beginning of holiday food season, so tune in to one of our most popular episodes with @kimvoss examining the history of food journalism! https://t.co/eLgZv3L8GK
Our November open access article is @matt_pressman's “Black and White and Red All Over? Reassessing Newspapers' Role in the Red Scare of 1919.”
https://t.co/AiAiiS2RhR
#mediahistory#journalism#newspapers