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Mugleston, William F. – Journalism Quarterly, 1975
Discusses the difficulties of publishing in the antebellum South, and describes the demise of "Uncle Remus's Magazine" in 1913 after a long struggle to keep it alive. (RB)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Higher Education, Journalism, Journalism

Bow, James – Journalism Quarterly, 1980
Analysis of the New York "Times's" financial column for the period October 13 to November 13, 1929, reveals that the column did not predict the stock market crash, that it was usually neutral in its financial analyses, and that it was more often optimistic than pessimistic in outlook. (FL)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Journalism, Media Research, News Reporting

Baldasty, Gerald J.; Winfield, Betty Houchin – Journalism Quarterly, 1981
A content analysis of four Washington state newspapers published in 1948 reveals that they did not provide fair coverage of the House UnAmerican Activities Committee's investigation of communist infiltration at the University of Washington. (FL)
Descriptors: Communism, Content Analysis, Media Research, News Reporting
Rutenbeck, Jeffrey B. – 1987
A study examined the conserving tendencies of the established political party press during the early stages of the antislavery movement. Eighteen partisan newspapers--from both northern and southern states--were examined for their coverage of the July 30, 1836, mob violence against James G. Birney and his Cincinnati "Philanthropist," and…
Descriptors: Blacks, Content Analysis, Media Research, News Reporting
Marmarelli, Ron – 1982
Among the elements of the press most active in the "dry-wet" prohibition debate in the 1920s and early 1930s, was "Literary Digest," a weekly current affairs review. In addition to its regular impartial coverage of the week's actions relevant to prohibition, the "Digest" contributed three national straw polls on the…
Descriptors: Alcoholic Beverages, Content Analysis, Journalism, Media Research
Lee, Richard W. – 1974
This thematic analysis of Edward L. Godkin's editorials appearing in the "Nation" seeks to reveal the major themes on which he wrote and then, by quantitative analysis, to provide some order to the themes and to study the interaction of the themes. Five hundred and twelve editorials, written over a period of 35 years and representing…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Editorials, Higher Education, Journalism
Olasky, Marvin N. – 1985
Recent history textbooks have conspicuously removed references to religion and religious publications, providing a distorted view of American and world history. One such neglected publication, the Boston "Recorder," was founded by Nathaniel Willis in 1816. A Christian newspaper, it was based on three principles: (1) to show theological…
Descriptors: Christianity, Content Analysis, Editors, Information Dissemination
Fortner, Robert S. – 1983
Through an analysis of the products of the radical press, this paper presents the rhetorical outlines of a cultural history of the 1930s. Following an overview of the "reportage" of the radical press, the paper focuses on that medium's rhetoric, specifically its conscious and unconscious use of religious symbolism. Among the publications…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Intellectual History, Media Research, News Reporting
Beasley, Maurine H. – 1983
Newly discovered transcriptions of 87 of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt's women-only press conferences held from 1933 to 1945 make possible an examination of the objectives, topics, and value of these conferences. By holding the conferences, Mrs. Roosevelt attributed to women an important function in the political communication process, and at the…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Employed Women, Media Research, News Media
Smith, Ted J., III; Hogan, J. Michael – 1985
Noting that 1977 public opinion polls concerning the new Panama Canal treaties were interpreted as showing increased support for the treaties, this paper contends that this interpretation was erroneous and that the major outcome of the extensive polling was misleading data. The paper is divided into three major analytical sections. The first…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Debate, Federal Legislation, Foreign Policy
Yodelis, Mary Ann – 1975
This study was designed to determine which kinds of printing--religious, government, or political--provided the highest volume (number of pages) of printing business for the Boston newspaper publishers from 1763 through 1775; which kind produced the most income; and which of the publishers appeared to be the most prosperous from 1763 through 1775.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Economic Factors, Economic Status, Higher Education
Bussel, Alan – 1975
In November 1901, "Country Life in America," an illustrated monthly magazine aimed at readers interested in suburban living, was introduced to the public. Although initially intended for the rural population, it soon concentrated its appeal on city folks who had the disposable income to purchase the automobiles and other products of the…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Editing, Higher Education, Journalism
List, Karen – 1986
To determine what messages women found in magazines regarding their roles in society in the late eighteenth century, a study analyzed three magazines: "The Ladies Magazine" (1792-93), "The American Magazine" (1787-88), and "The (Philadelphia) Weekly Magazine" (1798-99). All three featured a mixture of essays, verse,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Content Analysis, Eighteenth Century Literature, Females
Jones, Felecia G. – 1986
Between the years of 1916 and 1918 southern blacks began populating the urban centers of the north in a movement known as the "Great Migration." This movement was significant to the development of the black press, for it was during this period that the black press became a protest organ and rose to its greatest level of prominence and…
Descriptors: Black Employment, Black History, Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis
Marsh, Harry D. – 1985
Noting that Hodding Carter, Jr., editor and majority owner of the Greenville, Mississippi, "Delta Democrat-Times," was considered a spokesman of and to the South regarding racial matters during the two decades between the end of World War II and the escalation of the Vietnam war, this monograph examines Carter's newspaper in the two-year…
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Content Analysis, Desegregation Effects, Editorials
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