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Articles

Picturing Sports

Finding the “Actual” in Nineteenth-Century Illustrated Sporting News

 

Abstract

This is an exploratory study of sporting news in selected issues of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper from 1885 to 1895. Asking how the illustrated press portrayed sports and sporting events in the last decades of the nineteenth century, the authors analyzed pictorial content to understand how the ethos of realism was employed in pictorial representations of sports. During this period in journalism history, visual journalism was in transition. Photographic reproduction in newspapers was still being developed and perfected, so illustrating pictorial news content was still widely practiced. Using Thomas Connery's “paradigm of actuality” thesis, the researchers developed an “actuality” scale to help identify how realism was used to report on both amateur and professional sports in illustrated news reporting. In this exploratory study, the authors attempt to reveal how pictorial news about sports changed over time and suggest how connections between actuality and the cultural messages found in late nineteenth-century pictorial sports reporting can provide clues to intended audiences.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Scott D. Peterson

SCOTT D. PETERSON is an assistant professor in the communication department at Wright State University. He is the author of a recently published book, Reporting Baseball's Sensational Season of 1890: The Brotherhood War and the Rise of Modern Sports Journalism, as well as several articles on baseball literature and culture.

Jennifer E. Moore

JENNIFER E. MOORE, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of journalism at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Her research interests include nineteenth-century visual journalism, digital news preservation and public health.

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