Jane Nickerson
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Jane Nickerson & the United States of Arugula
The popular book, the United States of Arugula, includes several references to the New York Times first food editor, Jane Nickerson. In it, author David Kamp described the 1950s “emergence of a true food establishment in America, a small group of New York-based sophisticates who, via newspaper columns, magazine work, and cookbooks, had national even international reach.” He included in this group James Beard, McCalls’s food editor Helen McCully, Associated Press food editor Cecily Brownstone, Clementine Paddleford of the Herald Tribune and Nickerson. He wrote that the members of this group, “kept one another’s counsel, exchanged gossip, and stood united in opposition to the quick-bake, canned-soup mores of the domestic…
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Jane Nickerson manuscript
I have been working on my manuscript about NYT food editor Jane Nickerson. The story of Nickerson’s resignation from the newspaper was explained in Craig Claiborne’s memoir, A Memoir with Recipes: A Feast Made for Laughter (New York: Doubleday & Co., 1982). He wrote that at the beginning of 1957, she told the Times that “for reasons for family” she would be resigning from the newspaper as of September 1. Claiborne, who became the NYT food editor following Nickerson, wrote: “I was a bit startled at the news because of my respect for Jane as a journalist and also because I knew of her devotion to the job. She was…
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More Jane Nickerson Article Analysis
I am going over my clips from Jane Nickerson’s work at the New York Times and have found clear evidence of her “food as news” work. (This goes counter to the credit that too many historians give later NYT food editor Craig Claiborne.) Take for example, the above article from August 14, 1946. In it, Nickerson writes: “Potatoes have been pressed into service as a substitute so that more grain and flour can be sent to starving people.” She goes on to give several sample recipes using potatoes.
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Collecting Jane Nickerson Articles
Today I am analyzing some of the article I have collected by New York Times food editor Jane Nickerson. They reveal a variety of topics, many that could be considered hard news. In the limited world of newspaper food history, Craig Claiborne isgiven enormous acclaim. In fact, in June 2011 the New School devoted apanel to “Craig Claiborne and the Invention of Food Journalism.” Theprogram noted: “His career skyrocketed when The New York Times hiredhim as its first food columnist in 1957. Claiborne’s columns, reviewsand cookbooks introduced Americans to a wide range of internationaland ethnic food. Other newspapers followed The New York Times’s lead,and soon a cadre of authoritative newspaper…
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More on food editor Jane Nickerson
In my research on NY Times and Lakeland Ledger food editor Jane Nickerson, I came across this in-house ad. It adds some new information about her work in her years between the newspapers while she was also raising her children. As I suspected, she continued to freelance and did not leave journalism completely.
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The Significance of Jane Nickerson
In journalism history, there is always the question of whether a topic or subject is significant. This is my rationale for why Jane Nickerson is important to study. First, her role as first food editor at the NY Times, the nation’s newspaper of record is clearly significant. Unfortunately, her successor Craig Claiborne has widely overshadowed Jane’s role. (To his credit, he does note her accomplishments in his memoir.) Second, examining her overall career gives journalism history a richer understanding of women’s roles in the industry. If we are to believe the current story of Jane’s career, she left the NY Times to raise her children – it is almost as…