An Embattled Terrain: Women, African-Americans, Native Americans, and Immigrants at the Margins in U.S. Newspaper Stories, 1820–1860

Q4 Social Sciences Journalism history Pub Date : 2020-12-16 DOI:10.1080/00947679.2020.1837597
Thomas C. Terry, D. Shaw, Erin K. Coyle
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This article examines the presence of women, African Americans, immigrants, and Native Americans in a content analysis of newspapers for the 1820–1860 years from the Southern, Northern, Middle, and Western states, divided regionally and along the political and regional fault lines of the impending Civil War. There were 3,275 newspaper stories sampled and of those, 571 mentioned women, African Americans, Native Americans, or immigrants, accounting for 17% of all stories. This article concludes that far from being invisible or peripheral to events, ordinary Americans as newspaper readers were clearly aware of the activities and increasing importance of the groups studied.
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战地:1820-1860年美国报纸故事中的女性、非裔美国人、美洲原住民和移民
摘要本文对1820年至1860年来自南部、北部、中部和西部各州的报纸进行内容分析,考察了女性、非裔美国人、移民和美洲原住民的存在,这些报纸在地区上以及在即将到来的内战的政治和地区断层线上划分。共有3275篇报纸报道被抽样,其中571篇提到了女性、非裔美国人、美洲原住民或移民,占所有报道的17%。这篇文章的结论是,作为报纸读者的普通美国人非但没有被事件所忽视或边缘化,反而清楚地意识到所研究群体的活动和日益增加的重要性。
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来源期刊
Journalism history
Journalism history Social Sciences-Communication
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
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