Sympathy, madness, and crime : how four nineteenth-century journalists made the newspaper women's business / Karen Roggenkamp.
2016
PN4888.W66 R64 2016
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Details
Title
Sympathy, madness, and crime : how four nineteenth-century journalists made the newspaper women's business / Karen Roggenkamp.
ISBN
9781606352878
9781631012327 (electronic book)
9781631012327 (electronic book)
Published
Kent, Ohio : The Kent State University Press, [2016]
Copyright
©2016
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (181 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
PN4888.W66 R64 2016
Dewey Decimal Classification
071/.3082
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Description based on print version record.
Available in Other Form
Sympathy, madness, and crime : how four nineteenth-century journalists made the newspaper women's business.
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Table of Contents
Sympathy and the American newspaper woman
Representing institutions: asylums and prisons in American periodicals
Scenes of sympathy in Margaret Fuller's New-York Tribune reportage
Entering unceremoniously: Fanny Fern, sympathy, and tales of confinement
Making a spectacle of herself: Nellie Bly, stunt reporting, and marketed sympathy
Sympathy and sensation: Elizabeth Jordan, Lizzie Borden, and the female reporter in the late nineteenth-century
Afterword.
Representing institutions: asylums and prisons in American periodicals
Scenes of sympathy in Margaret Fuller's New-York Tribune reportage
Entering unceremoniously: Fanny Fern, sympathy, and tales of confinement
Making a spectacle of herself: Nellie Bly, stunt reporting, and marketed sympathy
Sympathy and sensation: Elizabeth Jordan, Lizzie Borden, and the female reporter in the late nineteenth-century
Afterword.