jounalism history

  • food journalism,  Jane Nickerson,  jounalism history

    Setting the Table

    I am reading this book as I work on a conference paper about New York Times food editor Jane Nickerson. I was pleased to see that she is referenced in  the index of the book, although once again she is completely overshadowed by the NY Times food editor who came after her, Craig Claiborne.

  • food journalism,  jounalism history

    Washington Post article on recipe testing

    The Washington Post has published an article about food sections and recipe testing. It is available here. The writer did not include anything about the Milwaukee Journal’s food section – which had a testing kitchen for decades. Here is the brief history included in the Washington Post article which excluded the long history of women’s pages: “Perhaps surprising, many of the editors contacted for this story said their recipe-testing budgets have not been targeted for reduction or elimination — at least to their knowledge. What might be more surprising, however, is that some of them had to persuade their bosses to institute recipe testing in the first place. It would…

  • Joan Younger Dickinson,  jounalism history

    Joan Younger Dickinson & the Ladies Home Journal

    Lance & I sent in our paper about wire and magazine writer Joan Younger Dickinson to a journal this week. Much of Younger Dickinson’s magazine writing in the 1950s and 1960s focused on women’s political & volunteer work – which was like the content found in progressive women’s pages of newspapers. We went through her papers at the University of Wyoming several years ago and presented a paper at the Popular Culture Association convention in San Francisco in 2007. My fingers are crossed that the papers finds a home.

  • jounalism history

    The end of A.P.I.

    I was sad to hear that A.P.I. (American Press Institute) is merging with N.A.A.F. Here is more about the merger. In the 1950s, prior to the beginning of the Penney-Missouri Awards, the seminars at A.P.I. were one of the only places that women’s page editors could network. Editors Gloria Biggs, Vivian Castleberry, Anne Rowe and Dorothy Jurney attended and presented at A.P.I. Castleberry said in her oral history that API gave her the motivation to make her section progressive. Lance and I went to a API seminar about Lifestyle Editors in Virginia a few years ago although the topics were more 1950s than Vivian likely encountered.

  • Beverley Morales,  jounalism history

    Writing about Beverley Morales

    We spent Sunday at out favorite beach – Playalinda at Cape Canaveral. It was a perfect day – 78 degrees and not a cloud in the sky. I worked on my presentation on women’s page editor Beverley Morales and her years at the Sun Sentinel. I will present the paper at the Florida Conference of Historians in Lake City next month. The talk is largely based on her letters to and from Penney-Missouri Awards’ Director Paul Myhre that are housed at the University of Missouri. I will be comparing and contrasting her career to other Florida women’s page editors.

  • Drue Lytle,  jounalism history

    Drue Lytle’s master’s thesis

    I recently came across the master’s thesis of Hawaii women’s page editor Druzella “Drue” Lytle. She wrote “A study of the plays of Rachel Crothers,” under her maiden name Druzella E. Goodwin while at Occidental College in 1937. The UCF ILL was able to track it down and send me a copy. It was very well written although the dedication page did not include a reference to her family. I have not been able to track down information about Drue prior to her college years. I am in the early stages of outlining Drue’s life and career.

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