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Search : journalism

1425 results

Swinton, John (1829–1901)

  • Creator(s): Yannella, Donald
Text:

, he resided there until the family's migration to Canada in 1843; like Whitman, he learned the journalism

Tennyson, Alfred, Lord (1809–1892)

  • Creator(s): Sanfilip, Thomas
Text:

review of Tennyson's Maud and Other Poems and Leaves of Grass, published by the American Phrenological Journal

Leggett, William L. (1801–1839)

  • Creator(s): Widmer, Ted
Text:

But his most important work was his journalism, particularly at the New York Evening Post, where he worked

Parton, James (1822–1891)

  • Creator(s): Garvey, T. Gregory
Text:

Willis's popular magazine The New York Home Journal.

Parton chose to leave journalism in 1854 when he signed a contract to write The Life of Horace Greeley

Parton, Sara Payson Willis (Fanny Fern) (1811–1872)

  • Creator(s): Smith, Susan Belasco
Text:

The Journal of the Rutgers University Library 4 (1940): 1–8. Fern, Fanny.

Phillips, George Searle ("January Searle") (1815–1889)

  • Creator(s): Tyrer, Patricia J.
Text:

Phillips, George Searle ("January Searle") (1815–1889) A journalist and writer of books, pamphlets, and journal

Wright, Frances (Fanny) (1795–1852)

  • Creator(s): Hynes, Jennifer A.
Text:

The journal also supported a variety of programs aimed at helping the workingman, or mechanic, intending

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain) (1835–1910)

  • Creator(s): Britton, Wesley A.
Text:

Mark Twain Journal 10.3 (1957): 3–9. Gribben, Alan. Mark Twain's Library: A Reconstruction. 2 vols.

Denison, Flora MacDonald (1867–1921)

  • Creator(s): Kalnin, Martha A.
Text:

suffrage movement, she also established a Whitman club and edited The Sunset of Bon Echo, the club's journal

By founding a society for Whitman, providing a meeting place for it, and producing a journal, Denison

Duyckinck, Evert Augustus (1816–1878)

  • Creator(s): Yannella, Donald
Text:

as the Review's literary editor and was coeditor and part owner of other radically nationalistic journals

Leech, Abraham Paul (1815–1886)

  • Creator(s): Golden, Arthur
Text:

His ordeal ended when he left teaching for a journalism career in New York City.

Walt Whitman: Is He Persecuted?

  • Creator(s): William Douglass O'Connor
Text:

teeth, springing up widely, as your exchanges will show, in the foul and copious abuse and insults journals

need, to which manly hearts are everywhere responding, such an attitude ill becomes the foremost journal

However, a critic in Appletons' Journal , whose article contains less truth to the square than I thought

Sanborn, and valiant letters in three or four journals by Col. R. J. Hinton.

But it is not my fault if the last fortnight's journals reaching Mr.

Civil War, The [1861–1865]

  • Creator(s): Hutchinson, George
Text:

Three days later he recorded in his journal a resolution to purify and "spiritualize" his body, to drink

'Crossing Brooklyn Ferry' [1856]

  • Creator(s): Nelson, Howard
Text:

He had written about ferries in his journalism.

Health

  • Creator(s): Sanfilip, Thomas
Text:

better-than-average knowledge of physiology and medicine, gained primarily by extensive reading of popular medical journals

Journalism, Whitman's

  • Creator(s): Killingsworth, M. Jimmie
Text:

It was through journalism that Whitman first discovered himself to be a writer, first joined the public

By 1838, Whitman was back to regular work in journalism, this time as the founding editor and publisher

During the early 1840s, he contributed reviews and essays to papers and literary journals and also began

The significance of journalism in Whitman's overall development is at least partly clear, however.

Journalism, Whitman's

'Leaves-Droppings' [1856]

  • Creator(s): Reitz, John
Text:

Brooklyn Daily Times, 3) the Christian Spiritualist, 4) Putnam's Monthly, 5) the American Phrenological Journal

Long Islander

  • Creator(s): Karbiener, Karen
Text:

Whitman had been teaching school for three years and was clearly eager to return to journalism.

Walt Whitman's Journalism: A Bibliography. Detroit: Wayne State UP, 1969. Whitman, Walt.

New York City

  • Creator(s): Thomas, M. Wynn
Text:

Very much the product of the "new journalism" that had resulted from New York's invention, in the thirties

Racial Attitudes

  • Creator(s): Hutchinson, George and David Drews
Text:

The inconsistencies particularly appear in differences between his journalism and unpublished notes,

Rossetti, William Michael [1829–1915]

  • Creator(s): Smith, Sherwood
Text:

Michael Rossetti, brother of Dante Gabriel and Christina Rossetti, was the editor of The Germ (1850), journal

neglect in the United States, and subsequent heated discussions of this in English and American journals

Slavery and Abolitionism

  • Creator(s): Klammer, Martin
Text:

Whitman's seeming indifference to the plight of blacks in his journalism and early fiction reflects a

between North and South so weakened the free-soil movement that Whitman abandoned his free-soil journalism

who had focused much of his journalistic writing on slavery, wrote three letters to the free-soil journal

egalitarianism nor his identification with slaves could have been anticipated by his free-soil journalism

One way to make sense of Whitman's seeming inconsistencies on slavery is to recognize that his journalism

Thoreau, Henry David [1817–1862]

  • Creator(s): Roberson, Susan L.
Text:

"Resistance to Civil Government" (later known as "Civil Disobedience") (1849), and his prodigious Journal

Traubel, Horace L. [1858–1919]

  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

were Richard Maurice Bucke and Thomas Harned); he founded, edited, and published The Conservator, a journal

typesetter, a skill he would employ throughout his life as he often set the type for his monthly journal

His journal, The Conservator, which he began two years before Whitman's death and continued until his

Conservator in 1899, and Gertrude, whom Horace and Anne educated at home, joined the staff of the journal

Whitman, Thomas Jefferson [1833–1890]

  • Creator(s): Waldron, Randall
Text:

When Jeff Whitman died in 1890, numerous obituaries, including several in major engineering journals,

Whitman, Walter, Sr. [1789–1855]

  • Creator(s): Rietz, John
Text:

free-thinking rationalist who rejected organized religion and regularly read left-leaning books and journals

Alcott, Amos Bronson (1799–1888)

  • Creator(s): Mason, Julian
Text:

The Journals of Bronson Alcott. Ed. Odell Shepard. Boston: Little, Brown, 1938.  ____.

Boston, Massachusetts

  • Creator(s): Round, Phillip H.
Text:

prestigious publishing houses of Ticknor and Fields and James Osgood, and the founding of two important journals

Fowler, Lorenzo Niles (1811–1896) and Orson Squire (1809–1887)

  • Creator(s): Stern, Madeleine B.
Text:

In October 1855 the American Phrenological Journal, published by Fowler and Wells, carried Whitman's

Gilder, Richard Watson (1844–1909)

  • Creator(s): Roberson, Susan L.
Text:

Gilder began his career in journalism as a reporter for the Newark Advertiser (1868), and by 1870 he

Temperance Movement

  • Creator(s): Hynes, Jennifer A.
Text:

Jennifer A.HynesTemperance MovementTemperance MovementWhitman's journalism and early fiction exhibit

readers of the dangers of overindulgence in drink and praises sober, virtuous habits.Whitman's journalism

Apollinaire, Guillaume (1880–1918)

  • Creator(s): Asselineau, Roger
Text:

He thought poetry should enjoy the same liberty as journalism, but considered free verse only one of

followed, which lasted for ten months in the pages of the Mercure de France as well as in other journals

American Phrenological Journal

  • Creator(s): Pannapacker, William A.
Text:

JournalPublished in New York by Fowler and Wells from January 1851 to April 1861, the American Phrenological Journal

and Repository of Science, Literature and General Intelligence continued the American Phrenological Journal

merged with Life Illustrated, another Fowler and Wells periodical, to form the American Phrenological Journal

1855) in their shop at 308 Broadway, and they permitted Whitman to use the American Phrenological Journal

American Phrenological Journal

Arts and Crafts Movement

  • Creator(s): Roche, John F
Text:

admired in Boston, home of the conservative Boston Society of Arts and Crafts, founded in 1897, and its journal

and publicize the 1897 exhibition that initiated that society and wrote occasional pieces for its journal

Bertz, Eduard (1853–1931)

  • Creator(s): Grünzweig, Walter
Text:

Gissing Journal 27.3 (1991): 1–20 and 27.4 (1991): 16–35. ———.

Untitled

Text:

during his undergraduate days that "Waldo" (as he was called after his junior year) began keeping a journal

Three days later he recorded in his journal a resolution to purify and "spiritualize" his body, to drink

He had written about ferries in his journalism.

Emerson, Ralph Waldo [1809–1882]

  • Creator(s): Loving, Jerome
Text:

during his undergraduate days that "Waldo" (as he was called after his junior year) began keeping a journal

Smith, Robert Pearsall (1827–1898)

  • Creator(s): Davey, Christina
Text:

Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 26 (1969): 170–196. Strachey, Barbara.

Williams, Talcott (1849–1928)

  • Creator(s): Leon, Philip W.
Text:

He learned journalism in New York City at the World and at the Sun.

there for thirty-one years until he became the first head of the Columbia University School of Journalism

The Encyclopedia of American Journalism. New York: Facts on File, 1983. Traubel, Horace.

Willis, Nathaniel Parker (1806–1867)

  • Creator(s): Garvey, T. Gregory
Text:

Britain's refusal to offer American authors copyright protection, Willis founded the short-lived journal

He achieved his greatest stature between 1846 and 1864 as editor of the New York Home Journal, which

Clapp, Henry (1814–1875)

  • Creator(s): Stansell, Christine
Text:

In 1858 Clapp had founded a literary journal, the Saturday Press, which was dedicated to publishing new

Twenty items on Whitman and/or Leaves of Grass appeared throughout 1860, including reviews from other journals

Clapp's journal folded in 1860.

Democratic Review

  • Creator(s): Smith, Susan Belasco
Text:

From Fact to Fiction: Journalism and Imaginative Writing in America.

New World, The (New York)

  • Creator(s): Erkkila, Betsy
Text:

printer and author suggest the multivarious sources of his later writing in the world of print journalism

Journalism in the United States from 1690 to 1872. 1875.

Brooklyn Daily Eagle

  • Creator(s): Renner, Dennis K.
Text:

earlier critics expressed puzzlement over the difference between the literary quality of Whitman's journalism

Journalism Quarterly 48 (1871): 195–204.Brasher, Thomas L.

American Whig Review

  • Creator(s): Rachman, Stephen
Text:

early story "The Boy Lover" in May 1845, this New York monthly was called The American Review: A Whig Journal

Bohemians in America

  • Date: [1882 or before]
  • Creator(s): Jay Charlton
Text:

But Joe was no donkey, and he has served journalism well.

"Reconciliation" (1865)

  • Creator(s): Mason-Browne, N.J.
Text:

He expressed great fondness and respect for them in his journals.

Religion

  • Creator(s): Kuebrich, David
Text:

important forms of popular literature; and school books, imaginative writings, political orations, and journalism

Riverby

  • Creator(s): Sarracino, Carmine
Text:

the midair mating of eagles, which Burroughs observed while hiking near Riverby and recorded in a journal

Russia and Other Slavic Countries, Whitman in

  • Creator(s): Bidney, Martin
Text:

When part of this review was translated and published in the American journal Critic (16 June 1883),

Slavic and East European Journal 34 (1990): 176–191.Chukovskii, Kornei. Moi Uitmen.

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