Preface |
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ix | |
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Acknowledgments |
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xi | |
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Introduction |
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1 | |
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Part I: Race Reporting |
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Mother, Murderess, or Martyr?: Press Coverage of the Margaret Garner Story |
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13 | |
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Racial and Ethnic Imagery in 19th Century Political Cartoons |
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27 | |
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Heretical or Conventional: Native Americans and African Americans in the Journalism of Jane Grey Swisshelm |
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35 | |
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Picturing American Indians: Newspaper Pictures and Native Americans in the 1860's and 1870's |
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45 | |
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Last Stand of the Partisan Press: Little Bighorn Coverage in Kansas Newspapers |
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57 | |
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Assignment Liberia: "The boldest adventure in the history of Southern journalism" |
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67 | |
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Birth of a Besieged Nation: Discourses of Victimhood in D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation |
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77 | |
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Part II: The Fires of Discontent |
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Fires of Discontent: Religious Contradictions in the Black Press, 1830-1860 |
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87 | |
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Allen W. Palmer and Hyrum LaTurner |
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Like Father, Like Son: The Antislavery Legacy of William Hamilton |
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97 | |
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Broken Shackles: How Frederick Douglass Used the Freedom of the Press, Speech, and Religion in Behalf of the African American Slave, 1847-1863 |
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107 | |
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Ebony Triangle: The Black Newspaper Network in Kansas, 1878-1900 |
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119 | |
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Illustrated African American Journalism: Political Cartooning in the Indianapolis Freeman |
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131 | |
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Frederick Jackson Turner Revisited: The Frontier Character of the 19th Century Black Press |
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141 | |
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Ida B. Wells, Crusader Against the Lynch Law |
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151 | |
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Part III: The Cult of True Womanhood |
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The First Lady and the Media: Newspaper Coverage of Dolley Madison |
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163 | |
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A Wonderful Duty: A Study of Motherhood in Godey's Magazine |
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171 | |
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Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the Cult of True Womanhood |
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179 | |
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Hazel Dicken-Garcia and Kathryn M. Neal |
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Reflections of the Civil War in Godey's and Peterson's Magazines |
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189 | |
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The Darlings Come Out to See the Volunteers: Depictions of Women in Harper's Weekly During the Civil War |
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205 | |
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Kate Roberts Edenborg and Hazel Dicken-Garcia |
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For Feminine Readers: Images of Women in the Newspapers of the Gilded Age |
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215 | |
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Contesting Gender Through Journalism: Revising Woman's Identity in The Lily |
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227 | |
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Part IV: Transcending the Boundaries |
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Transcending the Boundaries: Grace Greenwood's Washington |
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241 | |
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Julia Amanda Sargent Wood as Editor of the New Era |
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249 | |
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"L" Was a Woman: Lois B. Adams, Special Correspondent to the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune |
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257 | |
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Eliza Frances Andrews (Elzey Hay), Reporter |
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267 | |
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From Yellow Journalism to Yellowed Clippings: The Notorious Florence Maybrick |
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277 | |
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This Wicked World: Sex, Crime, and Sports in the National Police Gazette |
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287 | |
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The Liberty to Argue Freely: 19th Century Obscenity Prosecutions |
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301 | |
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Ida Craddock, Free Speech Martyr |
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317 | |
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Index |
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327 | |
About the Editors |
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339 | |
Contributors |
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343 | |