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Articles: Bibliography

Scholarship on Women Working in Journalism

Categorized by Gerda Lerner’s Stages of History

Pages 33-38 | Published online: 24 Jul 2013

COMPENSATORY HISTORY

  • Alpern, Sara. Freda Kirchwey: A Woman of the Nation. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987.
  • Adamson, June. “Nellie Kenyon and the Scopes ‘Monkey Trial.’” Journalism History 2 (1975): 88-89.
  • Baker, Ira L. “Elizabeth Timothy: America’s First Woman Editor.” Journalism Quarterly 54 (1977): 280-85.
  • Beasley, Maurine. “The Curious Career of Anne Royall.” Journalism History 3 (1976-77): 98-102.
  • Beasley, Maurine. “Lorena A. Hickok: Woman Journalist.” Journalism History 7 (1980): 92-95, 113.
  • Beasley, Maurine. “Mary Clemmer Ames: A Victorian Woman Journalist.” Hayes Historical Journal (Spring 1978): 57-63.
  • Beasley, Maurine. “Pens and Petticoats: Early Woman Washington Correspondents.” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 112-15, 136.
  • Beasley, Maurine, ed. The White House Conferences of Eleanor Roosevelt. New York: Garland, 1983.
  • Beasley, Maurine, and Paula Belgrade. “Eleanor Roosevelt: First Lady as Radio Pioneer.” Journalism History 11 (1984): 42-48.
  • Beasley, Maurine, and Sheila Silver. Women in Media: A Documentary Source book. Washington: Women’s Institute for Freedom of the Press, 1977.
  • Belford, Barbara. Brilliant Bylines: A Biographical Anthology of Notable Newspaper Women in America. New York: Columbia University Press, 1986.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox. “A Working List of Women Editors of the Nineteenth Century West.” Journalism History 7 (1980): 60-65.
  • Bradshaw, James Stanford. “Mrs. Rayne’s School of Journalism.” journalism Quarterly 60 (1983): 513-17, 579.
  • Bridges, Lamar W. “Eliza Jane Nicholson of the Picayune.” Journalism History 2 (1975-76): 110-15.
  • Brigham, Clarence S. Journals and Journeymen: Contributions to the History of the Early American Newspapers. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1950.
  • Brown, Charles B. “A Woman’s Odyssey: The War Correspondence of Anna Benjamin.” Journalism Quarterly 46 (1969): 522-30.
  • Chapin, Howard M. “Anne Franklin, Printer.” American Collector 2 (1926): 461 ff.
  • Chudacoff, Nancy Fisher. “Woman in the News 1762-1770— Sarah Updike Goddard.” Rhode Island History 32-33 (1973): 98-105.
  • Collins, Jean E. She Was There: Stories of Pioneering Women Journalists. New York: J. Messner, 1980.
  • Daniels, Elizabeth Adams. “Jessie White Mario: Nineteenth Century Foreign Correspondent.” Journalism History 2 (1975): 54-56.
  • Drewry, John E., ed. More Post Biographies of Famous Journalists. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1947.
  • Eberhard, Wallace B. “Sarah Porter Hillhouse: Setting the Record Straight.” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 133-36.
  • Endres, Kathleen. “Jane Grey Swisshelm: Nineteenth Century Journalist and Feminist.” Journalism History 2 (1975-76): 128-31.
  • Henry, Susan. “Ann Franklin: Rhode Island’s Woman Printer.” In Colonial Newsletters and Newspapers: Eighteenth-Century Journalism, edited by Donovan H. Bond and W. Reynolds McLeod. Morgantown, W.Va.: School of Journalism, West Virginia University, 1977.
  • Henry, Susan. “Reporting Deeply and at First Hand: ‘Helen Campbell in the Nineteenth Century Slums.” Journalism History 11 (1984): 18-25.
  • Henry, Susan. “Sarah Goddard, Gentlewoman Printer.” Journalism Quarterly 57 (1980): 23-30.
  • Henry, Susan Jane. “Notes Toward the Liberation of Journalism History: A Study of Five Women Printers in Colonial America.” Ph.D. diss., Syracuse University, 1976.
  • Hooper, Leonard. “Woman Printers in America’s Colonial Times.” Journalism Educator 29 (1974): 24-27.
  • Hull, Gloria T. “Alice Dunbar-Nelson: Delaware Writer and Woman of Affairs.” Delaware History 17 (1976): 87-103.
  • Jackson, George. Uncommon Scold: The Story of Anne Royall. Boston: Bruce Humphries, 1937.
  • Jones, Douglas C. “Teresa Dean: Lady Correspondent Among the Sioux Indians.” Journalism Quarterly 49 (1972): 656-62.
  • Kenney, Anne R. “‘She Got to Berlin’: Virginia Irwin, St. Louis Post-Dispatch War Correspondent.” Missouri Historical Review 79 (1985): 456-79.
  • Marzolf, Marion. Up from the Footnote: A History of Women Journalists. New York: Hastings House, 1977.
  • May, Antoinette. Witness to War: A Biography of Marguerite Higgins. New York: Beaufort, 1983.
  • Oldham, Ellen M. “Early Women Printers of America.” Boston Public Library Quarterly 10 (1958): 6-26; 78-92; 141-53.
  • Ringwalt, Jessie E. “Early Female Printers in America.” Printer’s Circular 7 (1872): 284-85.
  • Ross, Ishbel. Ladies of the Press. New York: Harper, 1936.
  • Rush, Ramona R. “Patterson, Grindstead and Hostetter: Pioneer Journalism Educators.” Journalism History 1 (1974): 129-32.
  • Schilpp, Madelon Golden, and Sharon M. Murphy. Great Women of the Press. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1983.
  • Schneider, Norma. “Clementina Rind: ‘Editor, Daughter, Mother, Wife.’” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 137-40.
  • Smith, Harold Ladd. “The Beauteous Jennie June:Pioneer Woman Journalist.” Journalism Quarterly 40 (1963): 169-74.
  • Steiner, Linda, and Susanne Grey. “Genevieve Forbes Herrick: A Front Page Reporter ‘Pleased to Write About Women.’” Journalism History 12 (1985): 8-16.
  • Tinling, Marion. “Hermione Day and the Hesperian.” California History 59 (1980-81): 282-89.
  • White, Karl T. “Frontier Journalist Stakes Early Claim.” Matrix 65 (1980): 24-27.
  • Wiseman, Diane. “The Underwood Beat.” Westways 72 (1980): 28-32.

CONTRIBUTION HISTORY

  • Beasley, Maurine. “Lorena A. Hickok: Journalistic Influence on Eleanor Roosevelt.” Journalism Quarterly 75 (1985): 281-86.
  • Beasley, Maurine H. “A ‘Front Page Girl’ Covers the Lindbergh Kidnapping: An Ethical Dilemma.” American Journalism 1 (1983): 63-74.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox. “Early Western Publications Expose Women’s Suffrage Cries.” Matrix 64 (1979): 6-9.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox.. “Fremont Older: Advocate for Women.” Journalism History 3 (1976-77): 124-27.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox.. “The New Northwest and Woman’s Exponent: Early Voices for Suffrage.” Journalism Quarterly 54 (1977): 286-92.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox.. “The Pioneer: The First Voice of Women’s Suffrage in the West.” Pacific Historian 25 (1981): 15-21.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox.. “The Woman’s Exponent: Forty-two Years of Speaking for Women.” Utah Historical Quarterly 44 (1976): 222-39.
  • Bennion, Sherilyn Cox.. “Woman Suffrage Papers of the West, 1869-1914.” American Journalism 3 (1986): 125-41.
  • Demeter, Richard L. Printer, Presses and Composing Sticks: Women Printers of the Colonial Period. New York: Exposition Press, 1979.
  • Endres, Kathleen L. “The Symbiotic Relationship of Eleanor Roosevelt and the Press: The Pre-War Years.” Midwest Communications Research Journal 2 (1979): 57-65.
  • Henry, Susan. “Margaret Draper: Colonial Printer Who Challenged the Patriots.” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 145.
  • Hudak, Leona M. Early American Women Printers and Publishers: 1639-1820. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1978.
  • McGlashan, Zena Beth. “Club Tadies’ and Working ‘Girls’: Rheta Childe Door and the New York Evening Post.” Journalism History 8 (1981): 7-13.
  • McGlashan, Zena Beth. “The Evolving Status of Newspaperwomen.” Ph.D. diss., University of Iowa, 1978.
  • McGlashan, Zena Beth. “Women Witness the Russian Revolution: Analyzing Ways of Seeing.” Journalism History 12 (1985): 54-61.
  • Marzolf, Marion. “The Woman Journalist: Colonial Printer to City Desk, Part II.” Journalism History 2 (1975): 24-27.
  • Marzolf, Marion. “The Woman Journalist: Colonial Printer to City Desk.” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 100-107.
  • Masel-Walters, Lynne. “A Burning Cloud by Day: The History and Content of the ‘Woman’s Journal.’” Journalism History 3 (1977): 103-10.
  • Masel-Walters, Lynne. “For the Poor Mute Mothers: Margaret Sanger and the Woman Rebel.” Journalism History 11 (1975): 2-10.
  • Masel-Walters, Lynne. “Their Rights and Nothing More: A History of The Revolution, 1868-1870.” Journalism Quarterly 53 (1976): 242-51.
  • Mather, Anne. “A History of Feminist Periodicals, Part I.” Journalism History 1 (1974): 82-85.
  • Mather, Anne. “A History of Feminist Periodicals, Part II.” Journalism History 1 (1974-75): 108-11.
  • Mather, Anne. “A History of Feminist Periodicals, Part III.” Journalism History 2 (1975): 19-23, 31.
  • Roberts, Nancy L. “Journalism for Justice: Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker.” Journalism History 10 (1983): 2-9.
  • Ruegamer, Lana. The Paradise of Exceptional Women: Chicago Women Reformers, 1863-1893. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University Microfilms, 1985.
  • Stearns, Bertha-Monica. “Reform Periodicals and Female Reformers 1830-1860.” American Historical Review 37 (1932): 678-99.

TRANSITIONAL HISTORY

  • Beasley, Maurine. “Women in Journalism Education: The For-mative Period, 1908-1930.” Journalism History 13 (1986): 10-18.
  • Henry, Susan. “Exception to the Female Model: Colonial Printer Mary Crouch.” Journalism Quarterly 62 (1985): 725-33, 749.
  • Henry, Susan. “‘Dear Companion, Ever-Ready Co-Worker’: A Woman’s Role in a Media Dynasty.” Journalism Quarterly 64 (1987): 301-12.
  • Steiner, Linda. “Finding Community in Nineteenth Century Suffrage Periodicals.” American Journalism 1 (1983): 1-15.
  • Steiner, Linda. “The Woman’s Suffrage Press, 1850-1900: A Cultural Analysis.” Ph.D. Diss., University of Illinois, 1979.

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