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University of Manchester
1.
West, James James.
Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987.
Degree: 2015, University of Manchester
URL: http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:293744
► This thesis is concerned with the ways in which Ebony magazine sought to recover, popularise and utilise black history between the late 1950s and the…
(more)
▼ This thesis is concerned with the ways in which
Ebony magazine sought to recover, popularise and utilise
black
history between the late 1950s and the late 1980s. The dominant
scholarly approach to Ebony has focused on the magazine’s bourgeois
values and visual aesthetics, and has ignored its importance as a
creator and disseminator of
black history. By contrast, I highlight
the multiple ways in which
black history became central to Ebony’s
content from the late 1950s onwards. Far from viewing Ebony as
peripheral to or simply reflective of popular debates into the
black past, I place the magazine at the heart of contestations
between the corporate, philosophical and political uses of
black
history during the second half of the twentieth century. In Ebony,
this shift was quarterbacked by Lerone Bennett Jr., the magazine’s
senior editor and in-house historian. Bennett’s emergence as a
prominent
black historian and intellectual, and his increased
desire to present history ‘from a
black perspective’, was
paralleled by Ebony’s broader move from a more politicised to a
more market-driven moment. Rooted in my unique position as the
first scholar to look at Bennett’s unprocessed papers at Chicago
State University, and one of the first researchers to examine
Bennett’s collections at Emory University, this thesis sheds new
light on the work of Bennett, on Ebony’s significance as a ‘history
book’ for millions of readers, and on the magazine’s place at the
centre of post-war debates into the form and function of
African-American history.
Advisors/Committee Members: BROWN, DAVID DC, Brown, David, Quinn, Eithne.
Subjects/Keywords: Lerone Bennett; Ebony Magazine; Black Press; Black History; Black Popular Culture
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Chicago ·
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APA (6th Edition):
West, J. J. (2015). Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Manchester. Retrieved from http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:293744
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
West, James James. “Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Manchester. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:293744.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
West, James James. “Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987.” 2015. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
West JJ. Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:293744.
Council of Science Editors:
West JJ. Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the Making and
Selling of Modern Black History, 1958-1987. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2015. Available from: http://www.manchester.ac.uk/escholar/uk-ac-man-scw:293744

Louisiana State University
2.
LaPoe II, Benjamin Rex.
Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage.
Degree: PhD, Mass Communication, 2013, Louisiana State University
URL: etd-07012013-143919
;
https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/45
► This dissertation seeks to understand the cultural meanings of the black and mainstream press’ online interpretations of the tea party. Little research exists on the…
(more)
▼ This dissertation seeks to understand the cultural meanings of the black and mainstream press’ online interpretations of the tea party. Little research exists on the modern black press; what does exist shows that unless the story is about race, the black press mirrors the mainstream press. To my knowledge, no research exists comparing the two presses on a racial issue in an online environment. This dissertation will fill that hole. The tea party narrative was, and continues to be, an intricate story for journalists to tell. Resonant myth offers interpretative templates for journalists to use for crafting cultural meaning while mediating reality. Tracking coverage of the tea party from the group’s beginning in early February of 2009 until one week after the 2012 general presidential election in November, this dissertation will examine what myths emerge, what the emergence of those myths implies about how journalists interpreted the tea party and black political empowerment, and the degree of racial implicitness in the discourse. To my knowledge, no work has coupled resonant myth with racial implicit frames while analyzing online media discourse in the mainstream and the black press. While many mainstream journalists either fail to recognize, or ignore all together, the racial component that the tea party poses to black solidarity, my research shows that black reporters working for the black press absolutely recognize the racial component and provide more thorough discussions than their mainstream counterpart. Historically, the black press has existed to fill holes of misrepresentation in the mainstream press; to that end, this dissertation shows, during a time when some question whether the black press are still needed and whether our society is “post-racial,” this dissertation, by combining a quantitative analysis of implicit racial frames with a qualitative analysis of resonant myth, provides empirical evidence that, in terms of coverage, blacks still struggle to get their voice heard in the mainstream press.
Subjects/Keywords: Black Press; Myth; Priming; Obama; Tea Party
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APA (6th Edition):
LaPoe II, B. R. (2013). Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage. (Doctoral Dissertation). Louisiana State University. Retrieved from etd-07012013-143919 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/45
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
LaPoe II, Benjamin Rex. “Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Louisiana State University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
etd-07012013-143919 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/45.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
LaPoe II, Benjamin Rex. “Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage.” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
LaPoe II BR. Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: etd-07012013-143919 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/45.
Council of Science Editors:
LaPoe II BR. Interpreting Racial Politics: Black and Mainstream Press Web Site Tea Party Coverage. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2013. Available from: etd-07012013-143919 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/45

University of Guelph
3.
Doyle, Amy.
O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927).
Degree: MA, Department of History, 2019, University of Guelph
URL: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/15990
► O Clarim d’Alvorada, Brazil’s first independent black newspaper, became a vehicle of inclusion for middle-class black men excluded from social advancement on the basis of…
(more)
▼ O Clarim d’Alvorada, Brazil’s first independent
black newspaper, became a vehicle of inclusion for middle-class
black men excluded from social advancement on the basis of race. Between 1924 and 1927, O Clarim d’Alvorada writers appealed to constructions of gender, women’s writings, and symbols of Mãe Preta to foster the cultural inclusion of middle-class
black men. Writers explicated a definition of proper femininity predicated on Brazilian bourgeois values of domesticity. However, this was not an example of assimilation. Instead, writers engaged in respectability politics whereby writers distanced themselves from the perceived “degenerative traits” of the Afro-descended masses by illustrating their adherence to bourgeois social values. By the late 1920s, writers proposed a theory of cross-racial solidarity by appealing to notions of
black sacrifice via the symbol of Mãe Preta. This thesis examines O Clarim d’Alvorada’s deployment of women and gender as a strategy of cultural inclusion.
Advisors/Committee Members: Racine, Karen (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: Brazil; Gender; Black Press; Race; Identity; Citizenship
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Doyle, A. (2019). O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927). (Masters Thesis). University of Guelph. Retrieved from https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/15990
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Doyle, Amy. “O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927).” 2019. Masters Thesis, University of Guelph. Accessed January 23, 2021.
https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/15990.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Doyle, Amy. “O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927).” 2019. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Doyle A. O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927). [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of Guelph; 2019. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/15990.
Council of Science Editors:
Doyle A. O Clarim d'Alvorada and the Gendered Negotiation of Black Citizenship in Brazil (1924-1927). [Masters Thesis]. University of Guelph; 2019. Available from: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/15990

University of Manchester
4.
West, Edmund.
Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987.
Degree: PhD, 2016, University of Manchester
URL: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/ebony-magazine-lerone-bennett-jr-and-the-making-and-selling-of-modern-black-history-19581987(398d9db5-507b-44d3-8952-216fd8e03b10).html
;
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734216
► This thesis is concerned with the ways in which Ebony magazine sought to recover, popularise and utilise black history between the late 1950s and the…
(more)
▼ This thesis is concerned with the ways in which Ebony magazine sought to recover, popularise and utilise black history between the late 1950s and the late 1980s. The dominant scholarly approach to Ebony has focused on the magazine's bourgeois values and visual aesthetics, and has ignored its importance as a creator and disseminator of black history. By contrast, I highlight the multiple ways in which black history became central to Ebony's content from the late 1950s onwards. Far from viewing Ebony as peripheral to or simply reflective of popular debates into the black past, I place the magazine at the heart of contestations between the corporate, philosophical and political uses of black history during the second half of the twentieth century. In Ebony, this shift was quarterbacked by Lerone Bennett Jr., the magazine's senior editor and in-house historian. Bennett's emergence as a prominent black historian and intellectual, and his increased desire to present history 'from a black perspective', was paralleled by Ebony's broader move from a more politicised to a more market-driven moment. Rooted in my unique position as the first scholar to look at Bennett's unprocessed papers at Chicago State University, and one of the first researchers to examine Bennett's collections at Emory University, this thesis sheds new light on the work of Bennett, on Ebony's significance as a 'history book' for millions of readers, and on the magazine's place at the centre of post-war debates into the form and function of African-American history.
Subjects/Keywords: 305.896; Lerone Bennett; Ebony Magazine; Black Press; Black History; Black Popular Culture
Record Details
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
West, E. (2016). Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Manchester. Retrieved from https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/ebony-magazine-lerone-bennett-jr-and-the-making-and-selling-of-modern-black-history-19581987(398d9db5-507b-44d3-8952-216fd8e03b10).html ; https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734216
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
West, Edmund. “Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987.” 2016. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Manchester. Accessed January 23, 2021.
https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/ebony-magazine-lerone-bennett-jr-and-the-making-and-selling-of-modern-black-history-19581987(398d9db5-507b-44d3-8952-216fd8e03b10).html ; https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734216.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
West, Edmund. “Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987.” 2016. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
West E. Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2016. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/ebony-magazine-lerone-bennett-jr-and-the-making-and-selling-of-modern-black-history-19581987(398d9db5-507b-44d3-8952-216fd8e03b10).html ; https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734216.
Council of Science Editors:
West E. Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett, Jr., and the making and selling of modern black history, 1958-1987. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2016. Available from: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/ebony-magazine-lerone-bennett-jr-and-the-making-and-selling-of-modern-black-history-19581987(398d9db5-507b-44d3-8952-216fd8e03b10).html ; https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734216
5.
Cardoso, Edson Lopes.
Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo.
Degree: PhD, Educação, 2014, University of São Paulo
URL: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-16032015-151945/
;
► Esta é uma tese-testemunho, na qual um ativista de movimento social relata a longa experiência de construção de sua identidade política etnicorracial. Destaque para sua…
(more)
▼ Esta é uma tese-testemunho, na qual um ativista de movimento social relata a longa experiência de construção de sua identidade política etnicorracial. Destaque para sua participação no debate público sobre ações afirmativas, veiculado principalmente no jornal Ìrohìn, de que foi editor. Sua trajetória e formação, suas experiências, realizações e tomadas deposição, assim como seus conflitos, são narrados da perspectiva de quem busca ressaltar a dimensão educacional do Movimento Negro. Nesse caminho, além de defender, como parte essencial da cultura brasileira, as estratégias de sobrevivência e de resistência à opressão e ao racismo desenvolvidas pela população negra, ressalta o impulso igualitário das ações do Movimento Negro e sua contribuição para avanços do conjunto da sociedade e da consolidação do processo democrático.
This is a testimonial thesis, in which a social movement activist recounts the long experience of building his ethnic-racial identity. A highlight on his participation in the public debate over affirmative actions, published mostly in the newspaper Ìrohìn, in which he was the editor. His career and shaping, experiences, achievements and statements, as well as his conflicts are narrated from the perspective of someone seeking to emphasize the educational dimension of the Black Movement. In this way, in addition to advocating - as an essential part of Brazilian culture - the strategies of survival and resistance to oppression and racism developed by black people, highlights the egalitarian impulse of the actions of the Black Movement and its contribution to the progress of the whole society and the consolidation of the democratic process.
Advisors/Committee Members: Fischmann, Roseli.
Subjects/Keywords: Activist; Ativista; Black movement; Black press; Formação; Imprensa negra; Movimento negro; Shaping; Testemunho; Testimony
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Cardoso, E. L. (2014). Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of São Paulo. Retrieved from http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-16032015-151945/ ;
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Cardoso, Edson Lopes. “Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo.” 2014. Doctoral Dissertation, University of São Paulo. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-16032015-151945/ ;.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Cardoso, Edson Lopes. “Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo.” 2014. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Cardoso EL. Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of São Paulo; 2014. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-16032015-151945/ ;.
Council of Science Editors:
Cardoso EL. Memória de movimento negro: um testemunho sobre a formação do homem e do ativista contra o racismo. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of São Paulo; 2014. Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-16032015-151945/ ;

University of Michigan
6.
Davis, Henry Vance.
The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927.
Degree: PhD, Social Sciences, 1990, University of Michigan
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/128506
► This study examines the first one hundred years of the black press, primarily through a content analysis of black newspapers published between 1827 and 1927.…
(more)
▼ This study examines the first one hundred years of the
black press, primarily through a content analysis of
black newspapers published between 1827 and 1927. Unlike other studies it does not concentrate on the men, materials, and accomplishments of the industry per se, rather, it focuses on the role of three seminal elements in the growth and development of
black newspapers: the physical development of the papers' content, the implications of the geographic clustering of
black newspapers, and the role of economic environment in the development of the
black press industry. Material is examined from an interpretative as well as space measurement perspective. The discussion covers three periods: the abolition period, 1827-1865; the transition period, 1866-1904; and the modern period, 1905-1927. Some scholars' representations of the
press are challenged. Many authors have portrayed
black newspapers' growth as fueled by a quest for equity and justice and the key actors as race leaders motivated by altruistic ideals. This study suggests the growth was fueled by elements in addition to equity and justice and that, too often, key actors were motivated by less than altruistic ideals. One can conclude that the changing economic landscape fashioned a new face for the
black press. The abolition period (1827-1865) of the
black press, noted for its mission orientation, was dominated by a few ideologies, individuals, and papers. However, due, at least in part, to the shift from a mission orientation to a more commercial orientation, which occurred during the transition period (1866-1904), the modern period (1905-1927) saw many papers dominated by financial ties to factions outside the larger community of blacks. In fact, this investigator could not escape the conclusion that commercialization brought with it requirements which critically altered the content judgment of
black editors, disrupted one of
black people's chief mediums of consensus, and made the modern period of this study, when influence was first sold passionately, both the zenith and the nadir of the first one hundred years of
black newspapers' history.
Advisors/Committee Members: Lewis, Earl (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: Black; Commercialism; Mission; Press
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Davis, H. V. (1990). The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Michigan. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/128506
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Davis, Henry Vance. “The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927.” 1990. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Michigan. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/128506.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Davis, Henry Vance. “The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927.” 1990. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Davis HV. The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Michigan; 1990. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/128506.
Council of Science Editors:
Davis HV. The black press: From mission to commercialism, 1827-1927. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Michigan; 1990. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/128506

Temple University
7.
Fraser, Rhone Sebastian.
Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955.
Degree: PhD, 2012, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,182270
► African American Studies
The writings and the experience of independent African American editors in the first half of the twentieth century from 1901 to 1955…
(more)
▼ African American Studies
The writings and the experience of independent African American editors in the first half of the twentieth century from 1901 to 1955 played an invaluable role in laying the ideological groundwork for the Black Freedom movement beginning with the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The anti-imperialist writings of Pauline Hopkins who was literary editor of the Colored American Magazine from 1900 to 1904 celebrated revolutionary leaders, and adopted an independent course that refused partisan lines, which prompted her replacement as editor according to a letter she writes to William Monroe Trotter. The anti-imperialist writing of A. Philip Randolph as editor of The Messenger from 1917 to 1928, raised the role of labor organizing in the advancement of racial justice and helped to provide future organizers. These individuals founded the Southern Negro Youth Congress an analytical framework that would help organize thousands of Southern workers against the Jim Crow system into labor unions. Based on the letters he wrote to the American Fund For Public Service, Randolph raised funds by appealing to the values that he believed Fund chair Roger Baldwin also valued while protecting individual supporters of The Messenger from government surveillance. The anti-imperialist writing of Paul Robeson as chair of the editorial board of Freedom from 1950 to 1955 could not escape McCarthyist government surveillance which eventually caused its demise. However not before including an anti-fascist editorial ideology endorsing full equality for African Americans that inspired plays by Alice Childress and Lorraine Hansberry that imagined a world that defies the increasingly fascist rule of the American state. This thesis will argue that the Black Freedom Struggle that developed after the fifties owed a great deal to Hopkins, Randolph, and Robeson. The work that these three did as editors and writers laid a solid intellectual, ideological, and political foundation for the later and better known moment when African American would mobilize en masse to demand meaningful equality in the United States.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Thompson, Heather Ann, Monteiro, Anthony B., Wonkeryor, Edward Lama, Joyce, Joyce Ann.
Subjects/Keywords: African American studies; A. Philip Randolph; Black Freedom struggle; Black press; Pauline Hopkins; Paul Robeson; periodical editors
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Fraser, R. S. (2012). Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,182270
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Fraser, Rhone Sebastian. “Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,182270.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Fraser, Rhone Sebastian. “Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955.” 2012. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Fraser RS. Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,182270.
Council of Science Editors:
Fraser RS. Publishing Freedom: African American Editors and the Long Civil Rights Struggle, 1900-1955. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2012. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,182270

Boston University
8.
Greenidge, Kerri K.
Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909.
Degree: PhD, American Studies, 2012, Boston University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/12402
► Between 1859 and 1909, the African-American press in Boston, Cleveland, New York, and Philadelphia nurtured a radical black political consciousness that challenged white supremacy on…
(more)
▼ Between 1859 and 1909, the African-American press in Boston, Cleveland, New York, and Philadelphia nurtured a radical black political consciousness that challenged white supremacy on a national and local level. Specifically, black newspapers provided the ideological foundation for the New Negro movement of the 1910s and 1920s by cultivating this consciousness in readers. This dissertation examines black newspapers as political texts through what I have called figurative black nationalism in the ante-bellum Anglo-African, Douglass' Monthly, and Christian Recorder; through the political independence advocated in the post-Reconstruction New York Age, Cleveland Gazette, and Boston Advocate; and through the tum of the century Woman's Era, Colored American, and Boston Guardian.
This study challenges fundamental assumptions about race, politics, and African-American activism between the Civil War and the Progressive Era. First, analyzing how ante-bellum African-Americans used the press to define radical abolition on their own terms shows that they adopted what I call figurative black nationalism through the Anglo-African's serialization of Martin R. Delany's 1859 novel Blake, or The Huts ofAmerica. Second, even as this press moved to the post-bellum south, northern African-Americans became increasingly alienated from the conservative rhetoric of racial spokesmen, particularly as the fall of Reconstruction led to repeal of the 1875 Civil Rights Act and failure of the 1890 Federal Elections Bill. Frances E.W. Harper's serialized novel Minnie's Sacrifice perpetuated the idea that free and freed people shared a post-bellum political outlook in the Christian Recorder, but such unity was elusive in reality. Consequently, northern African-Americans adopted a form of "mugwumpism" that questioned notions of blind African-American loyalty to the Republican Party. Finally, black northerners at the turn of the century reclaimed the radical abolition and political independence of the past in a successful assault on Tuskegee-style accommodation through a radical version of racial uplift. This radical racial uplift was shaped through northern black women's appropriation of Anna Julia Cooper's feminism, through Pauline Hopkins' serial novel Hagar's Daughter, and through William Monroe Trotter's participation in the Niagara Movement. Northern black politics, rather than white Progressivism or southern black conservatism, nurtured twentieth century civil rights activism.
Subjects/Keywords: African American studies; Black history; Black press; Civil rights; Newspapers; White supremacy; Gilded Age; Racial politics; African Americans
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Export
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APA (6th Edition):
Greenidge, K. K. (2012). Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909. (Doctoral Dissertation). Boston University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2144/12402
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Greenidge, Kerri K. “Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, Boston University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2144/12402.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Greenidge, Kerri K. “Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909.” 2012. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Greenidge KK. Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Boston University; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/12402.
Council of Science Editors:
Greenidge KK. Bulwark of the nation: northern black press, political radicalism, and civil rights 1859-1909. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Boston University; 2012. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/12402
9.
Calindro, Ana Regina Vaz.
A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba.
Degree: Mestrado, Filologia e Língua Portuguesa, 2009, University of São Paulo
URL: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8142/tde-24112009-141924/
;
► Esse trabalho baseia-se no estudo da colocação pronominal, pois este já é reconhecidamente um fator crucial na identificação de diferenças gramaticais entre PE e PB,…
(more)
▼ Esse trabalho baseia-se no estudo da colocação pronominal, pois este já é reconhecidamente um fator crucial na identificação de diferenças gramaticais entre PE e PB, verificadas desde o século XVIII.O objetivo deste trabalho é verificar se há alguma característica na linguagem dos jornais de imprensa negra que os diferencie dos da imprensa de circulação mais ampla e de outros documentos da época. E, assim, confirmar a diferença entre as variantes brasileira e europeia da língua portuguesa não é apenas superficial, mas gramatical, uma vez que enquanto o PE se tornou uma língua de colocação enclítica dos pronomes átonos, o PB tornou-se a mais proclítica das línguas românicas. Sendo assim, foram analisados dois jornais: O Patrocínio (1925- 1930), um periódico da imprensa negra da cidade de Piracicaba; e, a título de comparação, A Gazeta de Piracicaba (1882-1937), um exemplar da imprensa majoritária da época. Os jornais são constituídos de textos de diversos gêneros que trazem, portanto, dados que possuem características distintas e particulares em um mesmo periódico. Nesse contexto, o interesse pela imprensa negra surgiu da possibilidade de analisar textos escritos majoritariamente por negros e para negros. Devido a fatores sociais ligados à escolarização da população negra do período, havia a possibilidade do vernáculo da época encontrar-se mais exposto nesse material. Sendo assim, pretendia-se observar se a colocação brasileira se apresentava de forma mais saliente nesses textos que nos da imprensa majoritária. Porém, a história social mostrou que esses periódicos foram escritos por negros que haviam tido acesso, das mais diversas formas, aos padrões cultos da língua. Dessa maneira, a fim de se adequar aos padrões da sociedade da época, buscavam manter a variante culta da língua em sua escrita. De fato, na comparação dos dados da imprensa negra com os da imprensa majoritária foi possível perceber - no que se refere ao fenômeno estudado - uma grande semelhante entre ambos os jornais. Em particular, verificou-se que esses periódicos apresentam padrões de colocação próximos, ou seja, ambos mostram, ao lado da colocação lusitana, a colocação brasileira em percentuais que não se diferenciam significativamente.
This research is based on the investigation of clitic placement in Portuguese, since this a factor of great importance to identify grammatical differences between Brazilian Portuguese (BP) and European Portuguese (EP), acknowledged since the eighteenth century. The main aim is to verify whether there is any specific characteristic on the texts from the so called black press that distinguishes them from the major press from the period. And, then, confirm that the differences between the Brazilian and European variants exist not only superficially, but also in their inner grammar features. While EP has become a language that prefers enclitic placement, BP is the most proclitic of all romance languages. Hence, two newspapers have been analyzed: One of them, named O Patrocínio (1925-1930), represents the so black…
Advisors/Committee Members: Morais, Maria Aparecida Correa R Torres.
Subjects/Keywords: Black press; Clitic placement; Clíticos; História do português; Imprensa negra; Portuguese History; Sintaxe; Syntax
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Calindro, A. R. V. (2009). A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba. (Masters Thesis). University of São Paulo. Retrieved from http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8142/tde-24112009-141924/ ;
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Calindro, Ana Regina Vaz. “A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba.” 2009. Masters Thesis, University of São Paulo. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8142/tde-24112009-141924/ ;.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Calindro, Ana Regina Vaz. “A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba.” 2009. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Calindro ARV. A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of São Paulo; 2009. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8142/tde-24112009-141924/ ;.
Council of Science Editors:
Calindro ARV. A colocação dos pronomes clíticos em O Patrocínio: periódico da imprensa negra de Piracicaba. [Masters Thesis]. University of São Paulo; 2009. Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8142/tde-24112009-141924/ ;
10.
Souza, Rosângela Ferreira de.
Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940).
Degree: PhD, Educação, 2013, University of São Paulo
URL: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-03122013-131609/
;
► Esta investigação estudou o processo de escolarização do social a qual foram submetidos os negros da cidade de São Paulo nas primeiras décadas do século…
(more)
▼ Esta investigação estudou o processo de escolarização do social a qual foram submetidos os negros da cidade de São Paulo nas primeiras décadas do século XX por meio da análise de dois jornais do conjunto denominado da imprensa negra paulista: O Clarim da Alvorada e Voz da Raça. A perspectiva utilizada na pesquisa compreende o processo de escolarização como um conjunto de fazeres e ações promovidas por sujeitos que acreditavam em uma educação construída segundo as suas demandas. O processo de educar/instruir deveria estar relacionado às reivindicações bastante peculiares do grupo ao qual se destinava e vir acompanhada de transformações materiais, distribuição de riqueza, justiça e igualdade social. Neste sentido, a partir da leitura e análise dos artigos, editoriais, seções, propagandas dos periódicos procurou-se desvendar qual o projeto editorial de cada um dos jornais e suas principais implicações na formação da população negra paulista. A importância do associativismo negro como força propulsora das conquistas sociais e a conscientização do negro da importância da construção de uma identidade negra no início do século XX formam elementos analisados neste trabalho.
This research studied the social education process to which they were subjected Blacks from the city of São Paulo in the early decades of the 20th century through the analysis of two newspapers named the black paulista press: \"O Clarim da Alvoradaänd \"A Voz da Raça\". The perspective used in the research understands the process of schooling as a set of practices and actions promoted by subjects who believed in an education built according to your demands. The process to educate/instruct should be related to the peculiar demands of the group to which it was intended and come with material transformation, wealth distribution and social justice and equality. In this sense, from reading and analysis of articles, editorials, advertisements, sections of journals we tried to unravel what the editorial project of each one of the newspapers and its main implications in the formation of the black population. The importance of black associations as driving force of social achievements and black awareness of the importance of building a black identity in early twentieth century form elements analyzed in this work.
Advisors/Committee Members: Biccas, Maurilane de Souza.
Subjects/Keywords: Black press; Blacks; Education of social; Escolarização do social; Identidade; Identity; Imprensa negra; Negros
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Souza, R. F. d. (2013). Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940). (Doctoral Dissertation). University of São Paulo. Retrieved from http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-03122013-131609/ ;
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Souza, Rosângela Ferreira de. “Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940).” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, University of São Paulo. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-03122013-131609/ ;.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Souza, Rosângela Ferreira de. “Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940).” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Souza RFd. Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940). [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of São Paulo; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-03122013-131609/ ;.
Council of Science Editors:
Souza RFd. Pelas páginas dos jornais: recortes indentitários e escolarização do social do negro em São Paulo (1920-1940). [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of São Paulo; 2013. Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-03122013-131609/ ;

Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo
11.
José Roberto Gonçalves.
O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925).
Degree: 2012, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo
URL: http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=15150
► Este trabalho discute as formas de produção do jornal o Getulino, em seus aspectos gráfico, editorial e bandeiras de luta, buscando o entendimento não somente…
(more)
▼ Este trabalho discute as formas de produção do jornal o Getulino, em seus aspectos gráfico, editorial e bandeiras de luta, buscando o entendimento não somente das condições de produção deste periódico, editado por um grupo de jovens negros de Campinas entre os anos de 1923 a 1925, mas também das propostas de inserção social que este grupo defendia. Para a consecução deste objetivo trabalhamos na perspectiva da História Social que amplia as possibilidades de constituição e abordagem das fontes históricas de forma a perceber os movimentos sociais que dão suporte/movimento as ações empreendidas no seio da sociedade. A constituição da imprensa e mais especificamente da imprensa negra como fonte histórica para o debate sobre as ideias defendidas pelo movimento negro nas primeiras décadas do século XX. Com o desenvolvimento da pesquisa tivemos a oportunidade de perceber as formas de articulação e validação, não só das propostas, mas também, das maneiras como este grupo de jovens negros se apresentavam para a sociedade campineira. Com destaque para a própria escolha do meio (jornal) pelo qual deram vasão as suas propostas, passando pelos espaços de difusão e circulação, encerrado com a analise das propostas e linha de atuação que o grupo produtor apresentava à comunidade negra local, destacando-se a luta e o combate ao preconceito e a segregação social, pela afirmação da cidadania brasileira e republicana para os negros e a incorporação da história e da memória da lutas passadas no construção da identidade nacional
This work discusses the production of the newspaper Getulino in graphic aspects, editorial and banners of struggle, seeking to understand not only the conditions of production of this journal, edited by a group of black youths of Campinas between the years 1923 to 1925, but also the proposals of social insertion that this group advocated. To achieve this goal we work from the perspective of social history that expands the possibilities of formation and approach of historical sources in order to understand the social movements that support / movement actions taken within society. The constitution of the press and more specifically the black press as a historical source for the debate on the ideas defended by the black movement in the early decades of the twentieth century. With the development of research we were able to perceive forms of articulation and validation, not only of the proposals, but also the ways in which this group of young black men presented themselves to society Campinas. Highlighting the very choice of medium (newspaper) whereby went out gave their proposals, through the diffusion and circulation spaces, terminated with the analysis of the proposals and performance line that showed the producer group local black community, especially the struggle and the fight against social prejudice and segregation, the affirmation of Brazilian citizenship and republican for blacks and the incorporation of history and memory of past struggles in the construction of national identity
Advisors/Committee Members: Heloisa de Faria Cruz.
Subjects/Keywords: HISTORIA; Getulino; Imprensa negra; Campinas; História social; Black press; Campinas; Social history
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Gonçalves, J. R. (2012). O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925). (Thesis). Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo. Retrieved from http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=15150
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Gonçalves, José Roberto. “O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925).” 2012. Thesis, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=15150.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Gonçalves, José Roberto. “O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925).” 2012. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Gonçalves JR. O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925). [Internet] [Thesis]. Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=15150.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Gonçalves JR. O Getulino - um jornal de Carapinha: jornal editado por jovens negros em Campinas (1923/1925). [Thesis]. Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo; 2012. Available from: http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=15150
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Boston University
12.
Lassiter, Ernest Lee.
The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration.
Degree: MS, Journalism, 1963, Boston University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/29172
Subjects/Keywords: African-American newspapers; Black press; Race
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Lassiter, E. L. (1963). The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration. (Masters Thesis). Boston University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2144/29172
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Lassiter, Ernest Lee. “The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration.” 1963. Masters Thesis, Boston University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2144/29172.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Lassiter, Ernest Lee. “The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration.” 1963. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Lassiter EL. The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Boston University; 1963. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/29172.
Council of Science Editors:
Lassiter EL. The future of the Negro press assessed through its past, the new role of race in the world, and the impact of integration. [Masters Thesis]. Boston University; 1963. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/29172

Louisiana State University
13.
Melancon, Kristi Richard.
An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune.
Degree: PhD, English Language and Literature, 2011, Louisiana State University
URL: etd-07012011-162203
;
https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/216
► In An African American Discourse Community in Black & White: The New Orleans Tribune, an archival study of the first black-owned daily newspaper in the…
(more)
▼ In An African American Discourse Community in Black & White: The New Orleans Tribune, an archival study of the first black-owned daily newspaper in the United States, I argue that the newspaper rhetorically constructed a literate African American discourse community worthy of citizenship and equal political rights within the public sphere of Reconstruction United States. Although contemporaneous media in the South depicted blacks as both unable to read and write and as culturally illiterate, I demonstrate how articles across the lifespan of the Tribune represented, as well as encouraged and enabled, multiple literacies within the African American community. I ultimately argue that the newspaper created an identity as citizen for free and emancipated blacks alike through its inclusion of evidence of blacks’ education and knowledge of historical texts; black men’s economic and agricultural literacies and black women’s domestic skills; and the community’s understanding of civics. Scholars within periodical studies, who have focused primarily on Victorian Britain, have argued that periodicals provide a unique space for historically oppressed populations to enter public discourse. This project links literacy studies, periodical studies, and African American studies by extending this reasoning to the literacy practices of African Americans and by investigating how the staff of the New Orleans Tribune sought entrance to public discourse but also circulated a counterdiscourse that challenged dominant stereotypes of blacks. Simultaneously, this project questions how the lack of scholarly work on the Tribune, “the most important Negro newspaper of the Civil War era,” continues to remind researchers that the erasure of African American resistance and agency is not unique to Reconstruction, but is replicated through tellings of history and accessibility of archives within the academy today. An African American Discourse Community in Black & White: The New Orleans Tribune uses the newspaper to retell the history of African American literacy in Reconstruction New Orleans as one of agency and oppositionality. Ultimately, I argue that the Tribune used self-representations of blacks’ literacy practices to rhetorically construct an African American discourse community that was worthy of citizenship and therefore suffrage.
Subjects/Keywords: African American literacies; free people of color; periodicals; Reconstruction New Orleans; black press
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Melancon, K. R. (2011). An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune. (Doctoral Dissertation). Louisiana State University. Retrieved from etd-07012011-162203 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/216
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Melancon, Kristi Richard. “An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune.” 2011. Doctoral Dissertation, Louisiana State University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
etd-07012011-162203 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/216.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Melancon, Kristi Richard. “An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune.” 2011. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Melancon KR. An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2011. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: etd-07012011-162203 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/216.
Council of Science Editors:
Melancon KR. An African American discourse community in Black & White: the New Orleans Tribune. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2011. Available from: etd-07012011-162203 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/216

Ohio University
14.
Walck, Pamela E.
Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II.
Degree: PhD, Journalism (Communication), 2015, Ohio University
URL: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1438173577
► Race and ideologies of racial supremacy were at the very heart of World War II. U.S. troops did not have to look far to see…
(more)
▼ Race and ideologies of racial supremacy were at the
very heart of World War II. U.S. troops did not have to look far to
see how race influenced the American war machine as the country's
military policies required African American and white troops to be
processed, trained, and stationed at separate but supposedly equal
installations across the country. Race determined whether one
carried a rifle or drove a supply truck; operated the naval big
guns or loaded munitions into Liberty-class ships; and even whether
you would deploy or not.This study took an historical look at how
the media reported race and race relations in a war fought over
race. Specifically, it examined three events in the United States:
the Detroit race riots, Harlem riots, and the Port Chicago
explosion; and three incidents in the United Kingdom: the first
racial incident in Antrim, Northern Ireland, the mutiny at Bamber
Bridge, and the Bristol race riots, to reveal how mainstream
newspapers and the American
black press reported these events.
Through an extensive examination of news coverage in twenty-four
newspapers, U.S. and British government and military documents, and
oral histories, this study examines how race was reported and
framed in the media; and attempts to demonstrate how those frames
and newspaper routines expand our understanding of race and race
relations during this critical period of history.This study found
that often the mainstream media in both nations downplayed race or
at the very least attempted to minimize it during major news
events, unless it was impossible to ignore. Sometimes this effort
to curtail the role of race came from overt pressure from the
government, as it was with the British
press. Other times, news
workers self-censored for fear that images of violence between
Americans would fuel the Axis propaganda machine. Still other
times, wartime censors severely delayed news reports. This study
also found differences in how the U.S. and British
press reported
domestic incidents, particularly in terms of volume and tone of
coverage.
Advisors/Committee Members: Sweeney, Michael (Committee Chair).
Subjects/Keywords: African American Studies; American History; Black History; History; Journalism; Military History; World War II press; race relations; black press; British press; wartime censorship; Detroit race riot 1943; Harlem riot 1943; Port Chicago; Bamber Bridge mutiny; Antrim stabbing; Bristol riots
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Walck, P. E. (2015). Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II. (Doctoral Dissertation). Ohio University. Retrieved from http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1438173577
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Walck, Pamela E. “Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, Ohio University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1438173577.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Walck, Pamela E. “Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II.” 2015. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Walck PE. Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Ohio University; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1438173577.
Council of Science Editors:
Walck PE. Reporting America's "Colour Problem": How the U.S. and
British Press Reported and Framed Racial Conflicts during World War
II. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Ohio University; 2015. Available from: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1438173577

Georgia State University
15.
Oby, Michael Randolph.
Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement.
Degree: MA, Communication, 2007, Georgia State University
URL: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/communication_theses/20
► BLACK PRESS COVERAGE OF THE EMMETT TILL LYNCHING AS A CATALYST TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT by MICHAEL OBY Under the Direction of Leonard Teel…
(more)
▼ BLACK PRESS COVERAGE OF THE EMMETT TILL LYNCHING
AS A CATALYST TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
by
MICHAEL OBY
Under the Direction of Leonard Teel
ABSTRACT
The movement for civil rights in America gathered momentum throughout the 1950s. In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Brown vs. The Board of Education ruling, declaring unconstitutional permissive or mandatory school segregation, the white South responded with both passive and active resistance. In the midst of this ferment, an African-American boy from Chicago was lynched in Mississippi.
Subsequent stories in the
black press reported not only Emmett Till’s murder and the trial, but also a widening mobilization within the race, notably the creation of associations in defense of civil rights. The coverage of news and views in the
black press provide substantial evidence that this mobilization ignited the civil rights movement of the mid-1950s, just months before the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott led by Martin Luther King Jr. This research supports the view that the
black community’s mobilization during the months after Till’s murder served as a catalyst for the civil rights movement.
Advisors/Committee Members: Leonard Teel, PhD - Chair, Cora Presley, PhD, Michael Bruner, PhD, Mary Stuckey, PhD.
Subjects/Keywords: Emmett Till; Civil Rights movement; lynching; Black Press; African-American Press; Communication
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
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Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
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APA (6th Edition):
Oby, M. R. (2007). Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement. (Thesis). Georgia State University. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/communication_theses/20
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Oby, Michael Randolph. “Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement.” 2007. Thesis, Georgia State University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/communication_theses/20.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Oby, Michael Randolph. “Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement.” 2007. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Oby MR. Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement. [Internet] [Thesis]. Georgia State University; 2007. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/communication_theses/20.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Oby MR. Black Press Coverage of the Emmett Till Lynching as a Catalyst to the Civil Rights Movement. [Thesis]. Georgia State University; 2007. Available from: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/communication_theses/20
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
16.
Francisco, Flávio Thales Ribeiro.
Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932).
Degree: Mestrado, História Social, 2010, University of São Paulo
URL: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-18102010-150513/
;
► Esta pesquisa analisa o modo como as notícias e imagens de experiências negras dos Estados Unidos e da África foram utilizadas no jornal O Clarim…
(more)
▼ Esta pesquisa analisa o modo como as notícias e imagens de experiências negras dos Estados Unidos e da África foram utilizadas no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924- 1932) para a criação de um projeto de ascensão social para a população negra de São Paulo. Este periódico, que tinha grande notoriedade entre a imprensa negra paulista, se preocupou em entender o lugar do negro na sociedade brasileira. O caminho adotado para alcançar o significado das notícias sobre os negros norte-americanos e africanos esteve vinculado à compreensão do projeto do jornal para a inclusão social dos negros no Brasil. As informações sobre os países estrangeiros chegavam aos jornalistas através de duas publicações da imprensa negra norte-americana, Chicago Defender e Negro World. A autodeterminação dos negros norte-americanos e a luta pela descolonização das nações africanas eram tomadas como exemplos para a ação dos negros em São Paulo. Por outro lado, as políticas de segregação racial nos Estados Unidos eram reprovadas, o que valorizava o projeto dos jornalistas de O Clarim da Alvorada de luta pela assimilação da população negra pela sociedade brasileira.
This research analyzes the ways the black newspaper O Clarim da Alvorada (1924- 1932) used the images and news on United States and Africa from African-American press to propose social uplift plan for blacks in São Paulo. This publication, one of greatest among São Paulo city black press, was concerned with social place of black population in Brazilian society. The way applied to comprehend the meaning of the news on African-American and African experiences was related to the understanding of the newspapers social integration plan for blacks in Brazil. The information from others countries came to Brazilian journalists through the newspapers Chicago Defender and Negro World. The self-determination of African-Americans and the African struggles against imperialism were taken as examples of black political action by O Clarim da Alvorada. On the other hand, the Brazilian newspaper refused the United States segregationist policies as a mean to value the idea of black population assimilation into Brazilian society.
Advisors/Committee Members: Junqueira, Mary Anne.
Subjects/Keywords: Africa; África; Black identity; Estados Unidos; Identidade negra; Imprensa; Press; São Paulo; São Paulo; United States
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Francisco, F. T. R. (2010). Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932). (Masters Thesis). University of São Paulo. Retrieved from http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-18102010-150513/ ;
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Francisco, Flávio Thales Ribeiro. “Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932).” 2010. Masters Thesis, University of São Paulo. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-18102010-150513/ ;.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Francisco, Flávio Thales Ribeiro. “Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932).” 2010. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Francisco FTR. Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932). [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of São Paulo; 2010. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-18102010-150513/ ;.
Council of Science Editors:
Francisco FTR. Fronteiras em definição: identidades negras e imagens dos Estados Unidos e da Africa no jornal O Clarim da Alvorada (1924-1932). [Masters Thesis]. University of São Paulo; 2010. Available from: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-18102010-150513/ ;
17.
Reis, Carlos Antonio dos.
A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978).
Degree: 2016, Universidade Estadual Paulista
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/11449/143892
► Ao longo de todo o século XX, os negros brasileiros buscaram construir estratégias não só para melhor se inserirem na estrutura político-econômica vigente, como também…
(more)
▼ Ao longo de todo o século XX, os negros brasileiros buscaram construir estratégias não só para melhor se inserirem na estrutura político-econômica vigente, como também para reverter as representações sociais negativas com as quais foram identificados ao longo de toda a história nacional tanto em função de seu passado escravo, quanto por suas origens raciais. Assim, buscamos analisar o caminho percorrido pela imprensa negra paulista – jornais e revistas escritas por e para negros que se dedicaram exclusivamente a questões que envolviam os interesses dessa camada da população – no período entre 1916 e 1978. Diante do recorte estabelecido e dos periódicos selecionados, acompanhamos as diferentes formas com que a África foi representada e (res)significada por discursos formulados pelos articulistas dessa imprensa alternativa de modo a habilitá-la – ou não – a compor uma identidade afro-brasileira. A ideia central é demonstrar que as imagens formuladas e as memórias mobilizadas para referenciar aquele continente não se limitaram apenas à mera resistência ou negação das imagens depreciativas que, historicamente, circularam no país; ao contrário, a referência à África obedeceu a constantes negociações efetuadas por esses homens para compor a nacionalidade brasileira através da articulação de sua militância política com o cenário intelectual local, como também com as informações que chegavam de movimentos negros internacionais e da própria situação política dos países africanos.
A lo largo del siglo XX, los negros brasileños construyeron estrategias no sólo para integrarse mejor en la estructura política y económica del momento, sino también para revertir las representaciones sociales negativas que se han identificado a lo largo de la historia nacional, tanto por su pasado de esclavos, como por su origen racial. Esta investigación propone analizar el camino emprendido por la prensa negra paulista - periódicos y revistas escritos por y para los negros, dedicados exclusivamente a cuestiones que afectaban a los intereses de este grupo de la población - en el período comprendido entre 1916 y 1978. Teniendo en cuenta el corte establecido y las revistas elegidas, hemos visto las diferentes representaciones de África en los discursos formulados por los escritores de la prensa alternativa y la habilitación- o no – de estas representaciones en la composición de una identidad afro-brasileña. La idea central es demostrar que las imágenes y los recuerdos formulados y movilizados para hacer referencia al continente no se limitaron sólo a la mera resistencia o negación de imágenes despreciativas que históricamente circularon en el país; por el contrario, la referencia a África obedeció a constantes negociaciones hechas por estos hombres para componer la nacionalidad brasileña a través de la articulación de su militancia política con la escena intelectual local, así como con la información que llegaba de los movimientos negros internacionales y de la propia situación política de los países africanos.
Throughout the twentieth century,…
Advisors/Committee Members: Naxara, Marcia Regina Capelari, Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP).
Subjects/Keywords: Imprensa negra paulista; África; Negros; Identidades; Prensa negra paulista; Negro; São Paulo black press; Blacks; Identities
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Reis, C. A. d. (2016). A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978). (Thesis). Universidade Estadual Paulista. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11449/143892
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Reis, Carlos Antonio dos. “A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978).” 2016. Thesis, Universidade Estadual Paulista. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/11449/143892.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Reis, Carlos Antonio dos. “A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978).” 2016. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Reis CAd. A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978). [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual Paulista; 2016. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11449/143892.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Reis CAd. A África Impressa: identidades e representações da África na imprensa negra paulista (1916-1978). [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual Paulista; 2016. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11449/143892
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Universidade Estadual de Campinas
18.
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães, 1979-.
Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century.
Degree: 2014, Universidade Estadual de Campinas
URL: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281270
► Abstract: This dissertation presents a study about the experiences of free and literate black men, who were active in the press, as well as in…
(more)
▼ Abstract: This dissertation presents a study about the experiences of free and literate
black men, who were active in the
press, as well as in the political-cultural landscape of the cities of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro in the second half of the nineteenth century. Ferreira de Menezes, Luiz Gama, Machado de Assis, José do Patrocinio, Ignacio de Araújo Lima, Arthur Carlos and Theophilo Dias de Castro are the central subjects in this narrative, along with so many other "free men of color" who sought in different ways to conquer and maintain their spaces in the public debate about the Brazil¿s paths, while relying on the sustainability of their own individual projects. Against the grain of "color prejudice" daily practices, they not only contributed to debates on daily, abolitionist,
black and literary newspapers, but also led the creation of resistance, confrontation and dialogue tools and mechanisms. Moreover, an analysis of their trajectories allowed for the recognition of the similarities and differences among them. Often times, they developed joint interventions, especially in the defense of citizenship rights for the manumitted, free and enslaved blacks
Advisors/Committee Members: UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DE CAMPINAS (CRUESP), Chalhoub, Sidney, 1957- (advisor), Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas (institution), Programa de Pós-Graduação em História (nameofprogram), Slenes, Robert Wayne Andrew (committee member), Reginaldo, Lucilene (committee member), Castro, Hebe Maria da Costa Mattos Gomes de (committee member), Albuquerque, Wlamyra Ribeiro de (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Escritores negros; Imprensa; Cidadania; Racismo; Brasil - História - Séc. XIX; Black writers; Press; Citizenship; Racism; Brazil - History - 19th century
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães, 1. (2014). Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century. (Thesis). Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Retrieved from http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281270
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães, 1979-. “Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century.” 2014. Thesis, Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281270.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães, 1979-. “Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century.” 2014. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães 1. Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century. [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2014. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281270.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães 1. Fortes laços em linhas rotas : literatos negros, racismo e cidadania na segunda metade do século XIX: Strong ties in shabby lines : black writers, racism, and citizenship in the second half of nineteenth century. [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2014. Available from: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/281270
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
19.
Cerdeira, Marcos.
Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada.
Degree: MA, 0286, 2012, University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31978
► In Brazil of the early twentieth century one of the most important signs of prestige was (and still is) skin color. In the city of…
(more)
▼ In Brazil of the early twentieth century one of the most important signs of prestige was (and still is) skin color. In the city of São Paulo
black skin color was such a negative signifier that it prevented many educated
black people from advancing socially. As a result, many blacks in São Paulo formed organizations that sought to articulate and position their right to “eliteness.” Writers of the
Black Press were a prominent source of this articulation. This thesis focuses specifically on the writings of the newspaper O Clarim d’Alvorada as a case study of the
black press in its defining years (1924-1932). In this thesis, I argue that while these writers were a powerful force in criticizing racism, their own attempts to advocate and show themselves as “cultured” and “civilized” replicated the same exclusionary rationale through which they themselves were excluded.
This thesis is envisioned as an intellectual history and as a result, the first two chapters seek to situate the intellectual currents in which these writers were performing. Chapter one traces the history of racial thought in Brazil from 1880s-1937. Chapter two focuses on gender, specifically, dealing with women and the construction of norms of propriety based upon class. Both of these themes come together in the third chapter where the works of the contributors of O Clarim d’Alvorada are analyzed to demonstrate how their arguments against negative racial stereotypes were articulated by engaging in notions of propriety centered on gendered norms. Furthermore, this thesis seeks to situate the works of these men not only as journalistic political texts, but also as literary works of art in their own right.
Advisors/Committee Members: Tosta, Luciano (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: Brazil; Black Press; Race; Gender; Identity
…cultural barriers that inhibited the potential composition and audience for the
black press in… …São Paulo.
This means that the black press of Brazil during the early twentieth century was… …understand the political project of the black press without
understanding the concepts of… …intellectuals who comprised the black press in Brazil engaged with issues of
“belonging” to a local… …stereotypes). In the case of this study, we see the writers of the black press advocating for…
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Cerdeira, M. (2012). Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada. (Thesis). University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31978
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Cerdeira, Marcos. “Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada.” 2012. Thesis, University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31978.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Cerdeira, Marcos. “Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada.” 2012. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Cerdeira M. Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada. [Internet] [Thesis]. University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31978.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Cerdeira M. Black honor: belonging and the construction of identity among the writers of O Clarim d'Alvorada. [Thesis]. University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign; 2012. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/31978
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Virginia Commonwealth University
20.
Lee, Deidra.
Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News.
Degree: PhD, Media, Art, and Text, 2013, Virginia Commonwealth University
URL: https://doi.org/10.25772/VFXF-0N33
;
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/564
► Research has revealed that more Americans than ever are turning to the World Wide Web as their primary source for news and information instead of…
(more)
▼ Research has revealed that more Americans than ever are turning to the World Wide Web as their primary source for news and information instead of legacy media outlets such as printed newspapers and magazines and broadcast news. As more and more people rely on the Internet as a primary source for news, it is important to analyze the characteristics and content of online news to expose and correct problems associated with the practices that inform its production and presentation. There are several longstanding practices in the American journalistic tradition that have been adapted to the online news environment. The practices of market segmentation and gatekeeping are two such practices. To date, few studies have explored how internet news coverage differs when the same story is altered to address the perceived interests of specific target audiences.
This goal of this study was to collect and examine the characteristics of news stories presented on the homepages of three news websites—the Huffington Post, Huffington Post
Black Voices and News One—to arrive at conclusions about the similarities and differences in how news content is reported to a general audience and to an African-American audience. This exploratory study used both Web sphere analysis and qualitative analysis to examine the collected homepage news stories. It used the results of the analyses to explore the possible effects continued market segmentation and selective exposure online could have on discourse in the public sphere.
The study found that the legacy media practice of market segmentation was evident when online news reporting on targeted and untargeted news website homepages was compared. The study also revealed that the traditional role of the
Black Press in legacy media has been resurrected in new media and is evident on news websites produced by African-Americans, for an African-American audience. Additionally, a qualitative examination of online news coverage of President Barack Obama’s 2012 State of the Union address and the death of Trayvon Martin revealed that the targeted audience influences the editorial slant through which news websites report stories.
Advisors/Committee Members: Marcus Messner.
Subjects/Keywords: African-American news; Black Press; news websites; public sphere; online news; market segmentation; selective exposure; Trayvon Martin; new media; legacy media; web sphere; target audiences; black press; African-American websites; black news; mainstream websites; framing; gatekeeping; editorial slant; internet news; Art and Design; Arts and Humanities; Interdisciplinary Arts and Media
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Lee, D. (2013). Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News. (Doctoral Dissertation). Virginia Commonwealth University. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.25772/VFXF-0N33 ; https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/564
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Lee, Deidra. “Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, Virginia Commonwealth University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
https://doi.org/10.25772/VFXF-0N33 ; https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/564.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Lee, Deidra. “Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News.” 2013. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Lee D. Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Virginia Commonwealth University; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: https://doi.org/10.25772/VFXF-0N33 ; https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/564.
Council of Science Editors:
Lee D. Broken News: Market Segmentation and Selective Exposure in Online News. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Virginia Commonwealth University; 2013. Available from: https://doi.org/10.25772/VFXF-0N33 ; https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/564

University of Pretoria
21.
[No author].
Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
.
Degree: 2009, University of Pretoria
URL: http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10152009-152556/
► The apparent ‘invisibility’, or lack of representation of black men in contemporary mainstream gay visual cultures is the primary critical issue that the study engages…
(more)
▼ The apparent ‘invisibility’, or lack of
representation of
black men in contemporary mainstream gay visual
cultures is the primary critical issue that the study engages with.
The study presupposes that the frequency with which white men
appear in popular representations of ‘gayness’ prevails over that
of
black men. In order to substantiate this assumption, this study
analyses selected issues of the South African queer men’s lifestyle
magazine Gay Pages. Gay visual cultures appear to simultaneously
conflate ‘whiteness’ and normative homosexuality, while
marginalising
black gay men by means of positioning ‘blackness’ and
‘gayness’ as irreconcilable identity constructs. Images of the gay
male ‘community’ disseminated by queer and mainstream media
constantly offer stereotypical, distorted and race-biased notions
of gay men, which ingrain the exclusive cultural equation of white
men and ideal homomasculinity. The disclosure of racist and
selectively homophobic ideologies, which seem to inform gay visual
representation, is therefore the chief concern of the dissertation.
By investigating selected images that ostensibly embody the complex
cultural relationship between race and homomasculinity, the study
addresses the following forms of visual representation: colonial
representations of ‘blackness’; so-called gay ‘colonial’
representations;
black self-representation; gay
black
self-representation; and contemporary representations of
homomasculinity in advertisements and queer men’s lifestyle
magazines such as Gay Pages. A genealogy of images is explored in
order to illustrate the ways in which ‘blackness’ and ‘whiteness’
are respectively positioned as contradictory to and synonymous with
dominant visual representations of homomasculinity in gay visual
cultures. The hegemony of ‘whiteness’ in images sourced from
colonial systems of representation, queer male art and commercial
publicity, for example, are thus critiqued in order to address the
various race-based prejudices that appear to be symptomatic of
contemporary gay visual cultures. Copyright
Advisors/Committee Members: Prof J van Eeden (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: Gay pages;
Homomasculinity;
Heterosexualisation;
The gay niche market;
Representations;
Gay colonial representations;
Gay black self representation;
Black homophobia;
Black self-representation;
Blackness;
Colonial fantasy;
Colonial representations of blackness;
Consumerism;
Othering;
The south african gay press;
Whiteness;
Queer racism;
Queer advertising images;
UCTD
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
author], [. (2009). Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
. (Masters Thesis). University of Pretoria. Retrieved from http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10152009-152556/
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
author], [No. “Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
.” 2009. Masters Thesis, University of Pretoria. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10152009-152556/.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
author], [No. “Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
.” 2009. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
author] [. Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of Pretoria; 2009. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10152009-152556/.
Council of Science Editors:
author] [. Invisible queers : investigating the 'other' Other in
gay visual cultures
. [Masters Thesis]. University of Pretoria; 2009. Available from: http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-10152009-152556/

University of Pretoria
22.
Sonnekus, Theo.
Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures.
Degree: Visual Arts, 2009, University of Pretoria
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28724
► The apparent ‘invisibility’, or lack of representation of black men in contemporary mainstream gay visual cultures is the primary critical issue that the study engages…
(more)
▼ The apparent ‘invisibility’, or lack of representation of
black men in contemporary mainstream gay visual cultures is the
primary critical issue that the study engages with. The study
presupposes that the frequency with which white men appear in
popular representations of ‘gayness’ prevails over that of
black
men. In order to substantiate this assumption, this study analyses
selected issues of the South African queer men’s lifestyle magazine
Gay Pages. Gay visual cultures appear to simultaneously conflate
‘whiteness’ and normative homosexuality, while marginalising
black
gay men by means of positioning ‘blackness’ and ‘gayness’ as
irreconcilable identity constructs. Images of the gay male
‘community’ disseminated by queer and mainstream media constantly
offer stereotypical, distorted and race-biased notions of gay men,
which ingrain the exclusive cultural equation of white men and
ideal homomasculinity. The disclosure of racist and selectively
homophobic ideologies, which seem to inform gay visual
representation, is therefore the chief concern of the dissertation.
By investigating selected images that ostensibly embody the complex
cultural relationship between race and homomasculinity, the study
addresses the following forms of visual representation: colonial
representations of ‘blackness’; so-called gay ‘colonial’
representations;
black self-representation; gay
black
self-representation; and contemporary representations of
homomasculinity in advertisements and queer men’s lifestyle
magazines such as Gay Pages. A genealogy of images is explored in
order to illustrate the ways in which ‘blackness’ and ‘whiteness’
are respectively positioned as contradictory to and synonymous with
dominant visual representations of homomasculinity in gay visual
cultures. The hegemony of ‘whiteness’ in images sourced from
colonial systems of representation, queer male art and commercial
publicity, for example, are thus critiqued in order to address the
various race-based prejudices that appear to be symptomatic of
contemporary gay visual cultures. Copyright
Advisors/Committee Members: Prof J van Eeden (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: Gay
pages;
Homomasculinity;
Heterosexualisation; The gay niche
market;
Representations; Gay colonial
representations; Gay black self
representation; Black
homophobia; Black
self-representation;
Blackness; Colonial
fantasy; Colonial
representations of blackness;
Consumerism;
Othering; The south
african gay press;
Whiteness; Queer
racism; Queer
advertising images;
UCTD
Record Details
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Sonnekus, T. (2009). Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures. (Masters Thesis). University of Pretoria. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28724
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Sonnekus, Theo. “Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures.” 2009. Masters Thesis, University of Pretoria. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28724.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Sonnekus, Theo. “Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures.” 2009. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Sonnekus T. Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of Pretoria; 2009. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28724.
Council of Science Editors:
Sonnekus T. Invisible queers
: investigating the 'other' Other in gay visual
cultures. [Masters Thesis]. University of Pretoria; 2009. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28724

Universidade Estadual de Campinas
23.
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares, 1984-.
Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in.
Degree: 2020, Universidade Estadual de Campinas
URL: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/342226
► Abstract: This thesis analyzes the history of organizations run by groups of blacks, identified as men of color, in the cities of Campinas and Piracicaba…
(more)
▼ Abstract: This thesis analyzes the history of organizations run by groups of blacks, identified as men of color, in the cities of Campinas and Piracicaba in the first three decades of the twentieth century, and their actions for the citizenship of
black populations. In the years following the Abolition, several articles published in newspapers in the two cities of Oeste Paulista complained about the absence of local celebrations to the law that ended the slave system, while in the rest of the country the date was marked by large festivities. There were groups of men of color who took to the streets giving lives, but the writers wanted civic rites, solemnities that they considered to be characteristic of the great celebrations. In Piracicaba, a group of blacks decided to create a society with the aim of not letting the date fall by the wayside, promoting civic processions, and, although the party is their only goal for years, served other aspects of daily life. In Campinas, there were more entities and because this the
black associativism had many purposes: there were associations of mutual aid, recreational, dramatic, dancing, sports, instructive. Celebrating May 13 was also important. The men of color from the two cities sought to gain respect of the ruling sectors, at a time of strong stigmatization and inferiorization of
black populations. There were many arguments in favor of partial citizenship: blacks could not enjoy all rights because they needed to learn to live in a society guided by the free work; confused freedom with idleness; were driven by their addictions to crime and prostitution. That¿s why
black populations needed to be watched. Men of color created codes of conduct to present different from this image and to present themselves as able to live under the new Republican regime, as free men. To some extent, they were successful: they were viewed respectfully, their parties were considered acts of patriotism and gained spaces in local newspapers. However, the praise did not extend to the rest of the
black population. They were worthy, precisely because they didn¿t look like "others
black people". Although they accepted and highlighted this distinction, men of color fought for the moral elevation of
black people. The research used articles published in
black press newspapers, minutes of associations and documents of municipal governments, to analyze different aspects of the performance of associations of men of color in Campinas and Piracicaba, proposing that the parties, celebrations, tributes and recreational activities they organized were part of an anti-racist struggle that, at the beginning of the century, sought to conquer citizenship rights for the
black populations of these two cities
Advisors/Committee Members: UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DE CAMPINAS (CRUESP), Lara, Silvia Hunold, 1955- (advisor), Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas (institution), Programa de Pós-Graduação em História (nameofprogram), Silva, Fernanda Oliveira da (committee member), Reginaldo, Lucilene (committee member), Silva, Mário Augusto Medeiros da (committee member), Domingues, Petrônio José (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Negros - São Paulo (Estado) - 1900-1930; Cidadania; Movimentos sociais; Imprensa dos negros; Blacks - São Paulo (State) - 1900-1930; Citizenship; Social movements; Black press
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares, 1. (2020). Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in. (Thesis). Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Retrieved from http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/342226
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares, 1984-. “Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in.” 2020. Thesis, Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/342226.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares, 1984-. “Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in.” 2020. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares 1. Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in. [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2020. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/342226.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Lucindo, Willian Robson Soares 1. Comemorações, cidadania e festas : o associativismo negro em Piracicaba e Campinas nas três primeiras décadas do século XX: Celebrations, citizenship and parties : the black associativism in. [Thesis]. Universidade Estadual de Campinas; 2020. Available from: http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/342226
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Universidade de Brasília
24.
Ana Flávia Magalhães Pinto.
De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899).
Degree: 2006, Universidade de Brasília
URL: http://bdtd.bce.unb.br/tedesimplificado/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1058
► Ao reconhecer a existência da imprensa negra brasileira do século XIX e sistematizar um conjunto de oito jornais, este trabalho se inscreve nos estudos sobre…
(more)
▼ Ao reconhecer a existência da imprensa negra brasileira do século XIX e sistematizar um conjunto de oito jornais, este trabalho se inscreve nos estudos sobre os processos de construção identitária de pessoas negras livres em meio à vigência do sistema escravista e seus desdobramentos imediatos. A amostra é composta dos seguintes títulos: O Homem de Côr ou O Mulato, Brasileiro Pardo, O Cabrito e O Lafuente, do Rio de Janeiro (RJ), em 1833; O Homem: Realidade Constitucional ou Dissolução Social, de Recife (PE), em 1876; A Pátria Orgam dos Homens de Côr, de São Paulo (SP), em 1889; O Exemplo, de Porto Alegre (RS), de 1892; e O Progresso Orgam dos Homens de Côr, também de São Paulo (SP), em 1899. Ainda que se localizem em espaços e períodos diversos, esses periódicos vieram à baila em momentos marcantes para a história política brasileira e trouxeram representações, senão inversas, conflitantes. Entre as estratégias argumentativas de denúncia e combate ao racismo, empreendem o aproveitamento dos valores da democracia moderna, dos ideais iluministas e liberais para colocá-los a serviço do combate à discriminação racial e do estabelecimento de uma democracia efetiva. Tanto no Império quanto na República, todos os jornais protestaram para que os talentos e virtudes, e não a cor da pele, fossem a garantia dos direitos dos cidadãos. Desse modo, colocaram em xeque as efetivas condições de realização das promessas da igualdade moderna no Brasil oitocentista.
By recognizing the existence of the Brazilian black press in the 19th Century, and by systemizing a group of eight newspapers, this work is inscribed in the studies about the process of identity construction of freed black people upon the legality of slavery system, and it is immediate consequences. The sample is composed of the following titles: O Homen de Cor ou O Mulato, Brasileiro Pardo, O Cabrito e O Lafuente, of Rio de Janeiro (RJ), in 1833; O Homem: Realidade Constitucional ou Dissolução Social, of Recife (PE), in 1876; A Pátria Orgam dos Homens de Cor, of São Paulo(SP), in 1889: O Exemplo, of Porto Alegre (RS), of 1892; e O Progresso Orgam dos Homens de Côr, also from São Paulo (SP), in 1899. Even though those having taken place in various spaces and periods, these periodicals come to light in remarkable moments in the Brazilian political history, and brought about representations considered as conflicting, if not inverse. Between argumentative strategies of denunciation and combat against racism, they undertake the employment of values of modern democracy, the illuminist and liberal ideals to put them in service against racial discrimination and for the establishment of an effective democracy. In the Empire as well as in the Republic, every newspaper has protested for the talents and virtues, and not the skin color, be the guarantee of the rights of the citizens. In doing that, the effective conditions of accomplishment of the promises of modern equality in the 18th century in Brazil were threatened.
Advisors/Committee Members: Maria Therezinha Ferraz Negrão de Mello, Eleonora Zicari Costa de Brito, Denise Maria Botelho.
Subjects/Keywords: imprensa negra; racism; HISTORIA DO BRASIL; História-século XIX; sociedade brasileira; racismo; democracia; 19th century history; black press; brazilian society; identities and democracy.
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Pinto, A. F. M. (2006). De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899). (Thesis). Universidade de Brasília. Retrieved from http://bdtd.bce.unb.br/tedesimplificado/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1058
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães. “De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899).” 2006. Thesis, Universidade de Brasília. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://bdtd.bce.unb.br/tedesimplificado/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1058.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Pinto, Ana Flávia Magalhães. “De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899).” 2006. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Pinto AFM. De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899). [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade de Brasília; 2006. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://bdtd.bce.unb.br/tedesimplificado/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1058.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Pinto AFM. De pele escura a tinta preta: a imprensa negra do século XIX: (1833-1899). [Thesis]. Universidade de Brasília; 2006. Available from: http://bdtd.bce.unb.br/tedesimplificado/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1058
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Linköping University
25.
Nyberg, Michael.
Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur.
Degree: Management and Engineering, 2007, Linköping University
URL: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-10282
► Flextronics Design i Linköping, som ingår i den stora amerikanskägda Flextronics- koncernen, är en industrialiseringsenhet på mobiltelefonsidan. Det innebär att verksamheten kretsar kring att…
(more)
▼ Flextronics Design i Linköping, som ingår i den stora amerikanskägda Flextronics- koncernen, är en industrialiseringsenhet på mobiltelefonsidan. Det innebär att verksamheten kretsar kring att ta fram test- och monteringsprocesser, samt tillhörande utrustning, som sedan implementeras hos högvolymsfabrikerna belägna i olika låg-kostnads-länder. På mobiltelefonerna finns, beroende på modell, ett antal detaljer som pressas fast, antingen för hand, med en manuell press, eller med hjälp av en pneumatisk press. Den sistnämnda pressmetoden används när det rör sig om lite längre presstider på detaljen, från ett par sekunder och uppåt. Idag finns det två modeller som drivs med tryckluft och som pressar med olika kraftintervall beroende på vilket lufttryck som tillförs till systemet. Det har visat sig att det finns ett behov hos företaget att ta fram en ny konstruktion som pressar med ett lägre kraftintervall än de befintliga modellerna kan erbjuda. Det är önskvärt att reducera tillverkningskostnaden jämfört med tidigare modeller. Framförallt är en ny lösning på xy-bordet önskvärd då den står för en stor del av den totala kostnaden. För att tryckbilden, och därmed resultatet, ska bli så bra som möjligt är det också viktigt att konstruktionen går att kalibrera i x- och y-led, samt att även felaktigheter i planheten går att justera. Under konstruktionsarbetet har olika tekniska lösningar och koncept tagits fram som utvärderats. Den slutliga konstruktionen består av en tryckluftscylinder som är dimensionerad för att trycka med de krafter som är specificerade. Den rörliga delen av cylindern förs ner och pressar samman detaljen och telefonen som är placerade i en fixtur. Den är i sin tur fixerad i ett justerbart xy-bord som består av två aluminiumplattor med urfrästa spår. Inställningen av tryckbilden i x- och y-led sker med hjälp av styrpinnar. Eventuella skillnader i planheten verifieras redan vid monteringen av pressen, och justeras genom skimsning. Tillverkningskostnaden för den nya modellen har reducerats med 30 % jämfört med de tidigare pressarna. Konceptlösningen på det nya xy-bordet innebär en kostnadsminskning med 50 % mot det befintliga bordet.
Subjects/Keywords: Basfixtur; press; koncept; kostnadsreducering; black-box; cylinder; layout; Construction engineering; Konstruktionsteknik
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Nyberg, M. (2007). Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur. (Thesis). Linköping University. Retrieved from http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-10282
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Nyberg, Michael. “Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur.” 2007. Thesis, Linköping University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-10282.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Nyberg, Michael. “Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur.” 2007. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Nyberg M. Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur. [Internet] [Thesis]. Linköping University; 2007. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-10282.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Nyberg M. Konstruktion och utveckling av pneumatisk pressfixtur. [Thesis]. Linköping University; 2007. Available from: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-10282
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

University of Minnesota
26.
Khan, Abraham.
Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race.
Degree: PhD, Communication Studies, 2010, University of Minnesota
URL: http://purl.umn.edu/98800
► At the end of the 1969 Major League Baseball season, the St. Louis Cardinals traded their all-star centerfielder, Curt Flood, to the Philadelphia Phillies. Refusing…
(more)
▼ At the end of the 1969 Major League Baseball season, the St. Louis Cardinals traded their all-star centerfielder, Curt Flood, to the Philadelphia Phillies. Refusing the trade and seeking his unconditional release, Flood filed a lawsuit suit in federal court accusing baseball owners of exercising a collusive labor restriction - the "reserve clause" - in violation of federal antitrust statues. Flood's lawsuit was heard by the Supreme Court in 1972, and even though he lost, many observers have credited his case with transforming sport into its present form as high-salaried spectacle; Curt Flood inspired "free agency." In January 1970, weeks after filing suit, Flood appeared on national television and described himself as a "well-paid slave." At the time, some observers saw this as a fair analogy to his working conditions, and others saw it as an indecorous, racially motivated attack on the national pastime. With the remark, Flood initiated a public discussion of sport's labor practices that threatened not only baseball's sacrosanct pastoral image, but also its status, established through Jackie Robinson, as a cultural referent of racial progress. In the context of contemporary anxieties regarding the disappearance of the black activist athlete, Curt Flood is commended by many contemporary critics for having fought a lonely battle against the sports establishment. This nostalgic impulse, I assert, contains a paradox: Flood is martyred as the hero who made athletes rich, but it is the wealth of black athletes that is often blamed for their tragic disengagement from politics. By refusing to sell-out, Flood seems to have created a generation of sell-outs.
This project investigates what many believe to be his only consistent source of support: the black press. In both Flood's historical moment and in the annals of public memory, Flood's blackness figures into his case prominently but ambivalently. As he is often remembered, Flood's racial experiences as a minor-leaguer in the south "sensitized" him to injustice which, in turn, motivated him to sacrifice his career in defense of a universal, "colorblind" principle. I argue that such a position overlooks the ways in which the protean appearance of Flood's racial identity helped the black press construct a liberal political imagination, one that is currently faced with a crisis of representation over the meaning of the activist-athlete. Unlike other athletes of his era taking principled stands on matters of racial justice, Curt Flood's challenge required the formation of an interracial coalition with white players. As such, the public discourse surrounding his case offered black newspapers the rhetorical resources necessary to elaborate the ostensibly universal premises of liberal integrationism. Consonant with the ways in which they awkwardly imagined their own institutional existence, black newspapers presented Flood as the black embodiment of a universal principle. In short, I argue that as sport and liberalism found convenient articulations in the black public sphere…
Subjects/Keywords: Baseball; Black press; Civil Rights; Curt Flood; Race; Rhetoric; Communication Studies
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Khan, A. (2010). Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Minnesota. Retrieved from http://purl.umn.edu/98800
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Khan, Abraham. “Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race.” 2010. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Minnesota. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://purl.umn.edu/98800.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Khan, Abraham. “Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race.” 2010. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Khan A. Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2010. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://purl.umn.edu/98800.
Council of Science Editors:
Khan A. Baseball in the Black Public Sphere: Curt Flood and the disappearance of race. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2010. Available from: http://purl.umn.edu/98800

University of North Texas
27.
Tate, Tara L.
We've Only Just Begun: A Black Feminist Analysis of Eleanor Smeal's National Press Club Address.
Degree: 2000, University of North Texas
URL: https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2595/
► The voices of black women have traditionally been excluded from rhetorical scholarship, both as a subject of study and as a methodological approach. Despite the…
(more)
▼ The voices of
black women have traditionally been excluded from rhetorical scholarship, both as a
subject of study and as a methodological approach. Despite the little attention
black feminist thought has received,
black women have long been articulating the unique intersection of oppressions they face and have been developing critical epistemologies.This study analyzes the National
Press Club address given by NOW President Eleanor Smeal utilizing a
black feminist methodological approach. The study constructs a
black feminist theory for the communication discipline and applies it to a discursive artifact from the women's liberation movement. The implications of the study include the introduction of a new methodological approach to the communication discipline that can expand the liberatory reach of its scholarship.
Advisors/Committee Members: DeLoach, Mark, Gossett, John S., Bruner, Michael.
Subjects/Keywords: Smeal, Eleanor.; Feminism.; Rhetoric.; black feminist thought; National Press Club; Eleanor Smeal
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Baylor University
28.
Stone, Robert P.
Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States.
Degree: MA, Journalism., 2006, Baylor University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2104/3906
► The global impact of the events of September 11, 2001, provoked an interest in American media coverage of terrorism. With African-Americans making up more than…
(more)
▼ The global impact of the events of September 11, 2001, provoked an interest in American media coverage of terrorism. With African-Americans making up more than 12 percent of the country’s population and more than 40 percent of the country’s Muslim population, an overview of
black press coverage of race relations is juxtaposed with mainstream (white-owned)
press coverage of
black Americans. An account of the general
press' mostly negative coverage of Arab-Americans and Muslims as potential terrorists follows. Clashing viewpoints of the
black press and the general
press are best explained by the idea that news is culture, reflecting the historical experiences and psychological and sociological makeup of white and
black Americans. This content analysis of six newspapers from Atlanta, Chicago and Los Angeles found important distinctions in results before and after 9/11 but little statistical significance, primarily because of low or "0" scores amongst the minority publications.
Advisors/Committee Members: Stone, Sara J. (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: American newspapers; Black newspapers – United States.; Terrorism and mass media.; Arabs – Press coverage – United States.; Muslims – Press coverage – United States.
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APA ·
Chicago ·
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APA (6th Edition):
Stone, R. P. (2006). Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States. (Masters Thesis). Baylor University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2104/3906
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Stone, Robert P. “Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States.” 2006. Masters Thesis, Baylor University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2104/3906.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Stone, Robert P. “Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States.” 2006. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Stone RP. Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Baylor University; 2006. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2104/3906.
Council of Science Editors:
Stone RP. Race, faith and fear: general press and black press coverage of Arabs, Muslims and the stigma of terrorism in the United States. [Masters Thesis]. Baylor University; 2006. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2104/3906

Michigan State University
29.
Timmons, Rashad.
Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit.
Degree: 2018, Michigan State University
URL: http://etd.lib.msu.edu/islandora/object/etd:6993
► Thesis M.A. Michigan State University. Journalism 2018
Efforts of urban development and renewal set forth by city, state, and federal governments are central to the…
(more)
▼ Thesis M.A. Michigan State University. Journalism 2018
Efforts of urban development and renewal set forth by city, state, and federal governments are central to the histories of postwar industrial cities and metropolises in the United States. As suburbanization, primarily abetted by federal policies, began to facilitate population loss, economic decline, corporate decentralization, and disinvestment within industrial city centers, cities like Pittsburgh, Dayton, and Detroit were forced to synthesize development and renewal strategies to alleviate mounting urban decay. Detroit—once the beacon of industry in the nation—has come to epitomize the worst of these issues, as the city has experienced over six decades of decline. The rapid exodus of predominantly white, middle-class residents to metropolitan suburbs and the correlated relocation of industries, residential and regional segregation, and consistent government mismanagement devastated Detroit’s urban core. After 1952, when the city’s population peaked at 1.85 million, considerable attempts at urban development and renewal were made to revitalize infrastructure, combat impending decay and blight, and lure private capital back to the city. These efforts, however, often came at the expense of Detroit’s most vulnerable communities—increasingly Black and poor—so much so that the Detroit Urban League came to refer to urban renewal and slum clearance as “negro removal” (Sugrue, 2014). The press and broader media industries in Detroit were instrumental in shaping narratives about proposed development and renewal strategies. Today, as many stakeholders speculate on Detroit's comeback and private capital pours into select parts of the city, its most vulnerable residents continue to struggle in areas ranging from housing to education to employment. These residents, still chiefly Black and poor, remain on the margins of Detroit's spotty progress. Discourses around development and renewal continue to be shaped by political and corporate agents, community members, and particularly the press. Currently, the sum of coverage pertaining to urban development and renewal is generally mixed and nuanced; nevertheless, mainstream media have not strayed from framing private development in the city as a markedly positive enterprise, even as some of this investment has facilitated further harm to the most socioeconomically vulnerable. This research focuses on the perspectives held by individuals a part of, or at least closely connected to, those vulnerable communities by centering Black, Detroit residents. Put simply, the central inquires of this research hope to uncover what sources of media Black Detroiters frequent to acquire news about urban development and renewal and what are their perceptions of that coverage. To address these questions, a quantitative survey was administered to Black undergraduate students listed as residents of Detroit at a large, Midwestern university. This university is the largest (by student enrollment) in the state where Detroit is located. Findings show…
Advisors/Committee Members: Chavez, Manuel, Freedman, Eric, Grimm, Joe.
Subjects/Keywords: Blacks and mass media – Michigan – Detroit; College students, Black – Attitudes; Urban renewal – Press coverage – Michigan – Detroit; Economic development – Press coverage – Michigan – Detroit; Mass media – Objectivity – Michigan – Detroit; Mass media – Objectivity; Blacks and mass media; Journalism; African American studies
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Record Details
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Timmons, R. (2018). Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit. (Thesis). Michigan State University. Retrieved from http://etd.lib.msu.edu/islandora/object/etd:6993
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Timmons, Rashad. “Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit.” 2018. Thesis, Michigan State University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://etd.lib.msu.edu/islandora/object/etd:6993.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Timmons, Rashad. “Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit.” 2018. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Timmons R. Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit. [Internet] [Thesis]. Michigan State University; 2018. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://etd.lib.msu.edu/islandora/object/etd:6993.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Timmons R. Removal or renewal : black students' attitudes towards media coverage of urban development and renewal in Detroit. [Thesis]. Michigan State University; 2018. Available from: http://etd.lib.msu.edu/islandora/object/etd:6993
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Stellenbosch University
30.
Matsebatlela, Emmanuel Mogoboya.
South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective.
Degree: Journalism, 2009, Stellenbosch University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2326
► Thesis (MPhil (Journalism)) – University of Stellenbosch, 2009.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study examines how positively or negatively as well as how subjectively or objectively the South…
(more)
▼ Thesis (MPhil (Journalism)) – University of Stellenbosch, 2009.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study examines how positively or negatively as well as how subjectively or objectively the South African tabloid newspapers represent black celebrities. This examination was primarily conducted by using the content analysis research technique. The researcher selected a total of 85 newspapers spread across four different South African daily and weekend tabloid newspapers that were published during the period February to September 2008. The results from the data collected reveal that tabloid newspapers tend to overemphasize negativity when reporting about black celebrities. The findings also reveal a clear differential in the representation of black female celebrities vis-à-vis male celebrities. Unlike male celebrities whose roles were mainly defined in terms of political activities and personal disputes, female celebrities’ roles were largely confined to relationships and sex. The language used by the four newspapers in their representation of celebrities appears to be humiliating and, in some instances, downright disparaging. There is little doubt that media representations of celebrities, whether positive or negative, serve as mirrors to how some members of society behave. To this end, there needs to be a shift from the current preoccupation with sensationalizing negative news when South African tabloid newspapers report on black celebrities. Tabloid newspapers should judiciously use their greater focus on celebrities’ private lives to report on more positive personal stories that focus on the achievements of celebrities, including how some celebrities are living positively with HIV/AIDS. Since this study only focused on South African tabloid newspapers’ representations of black celebrities, and only employed the content analysis method, further research is recommended on the impact of celebrities’ representations on the South African society.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie ondersoek hoe positief of negatief, asmede subjektief of objektief, daar oor swart beroemdes in Suid-Afrikaanse ponie- of skinderkoerante verslag gedoen word. Die ondersoek is primêr met behulp van die inhoudsanaliseondersoekmetode uitgevoer. Die navorser het 85 koerante uit vier verskillende Suid-Afrikaanse dagblaaie en naweekponiekoerante gekies uit die tydperk Februarie tot September 2008. Die resultate toon ‘n tendens in die poniekoerante dat oorwegend negatiewe verslagdoening oor swart beroemdes vooropgestel word. Die bevindinge toon ook ’n duidelike verskil tussen die verslagdoening oor beroemde swart vroue teenoor dié oor swart mans. In teenstelling met die mans wie se rolle hoofsaaklik ingevolge hulle politieke aktiwiteite en persoonlike dispute gedefinieer word, word beroemde swart vroue se rolle hoofsaaklik beperk tot verhoudings en seks. Die taalgebruik in die verslaggewing oor beroemdes in die vier poniekoerante blyk uiters vernederend, en in sommige gevalle, selfs degraderend en wrang te wees. Daar bestaan min twyfel dat verslaggewing…
Advisors/Committee Members: Ogada, J., University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Journalism..
Subjects/Keywords: Journalism; Dissertations – Journalism; Celebrities – Press coverage – South Africa; Celebrities in mass media; Black women – Press coverage – South Africa; Black men – Press coverage – South Africa; Tabloid newspapers – South Africa; Journalism
Record Details
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Record Details
Similar Records
Cite
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Matsebatlela, E. M. (2009). South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective. (Thesis). Stellenbosch University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2326
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Matsebatlela, Emmanuel Mogoboya. “South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective.” 2009. Thesis, Stellenbosch University. Accessed January 23, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2326.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Matsebatlela, Emmanuel Mogoboya. “South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective.” 2009. Web. 23 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Matsebatlela EM. South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective. [Internet] [Thesis]. Stellenbosch University; 2009. [cited 2021 Jan 23].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2326.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Matsebatlela EM. South African tabloid newspapers’ representation of black celebrities: A social constructionism perspective. [Thesis]. Stellenbosch University; 2009. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2326
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
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