Academic literature on the topic 'Periodicals editors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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WALE, MATTHEW. "Editing entomology: natural-history periodicals and the shaping of scientific communities in nineteenth-century Britain." British Journal for the History of Science 52, no. 3 (2019): 405–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087419000050.

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AbstractThis article addresses the issue of professionalization in the life sciences during the second half of the nineteenth century through a survey of British entomological periodicals. It is generally accepted that this period saw the rise of professional practitioners and the emergence of biology (as opposed to the older mode of natural history). However, recent scholarship has increasingly shown that this narrative elides the more complex processes at work in shaping scientific communities from the 1850s to the turn of the century. This article adds to such scholarship by examining the ways in which the editors of four entomological periodicals from across this time frame attempted to shape the communities of their readership, and in particular focuses upon the apparent divide between ‘mere collectors’ and ‘entomologists’ as expressed within these journals. Crucially, the article argues that non-professional practitioners were active in defining their own distinct identities and thereby claiming scientific authority. Alongside the periodicals, the article makes use of the correspondence archive of the entomologist and periodical editor Henry Tibbats Stainton (1822–1892), which has hitherto not been subject to sustained analysis by historians.
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Eşanu, Octavian. "Critical Machines: Art Periodicals Today (Conference Report and Q&A)." ARTMargins 5, no. 3 (2016): 11–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/artm_a_00156.

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This introduction and selection of Questions and Answers are from a conference organized in 2014 at the American University of Beirut Art Galleries titled Critical Machines: Art Periodicals Today. The conference summoned editors of art periodicals from different countries in order to discuss the role of art magazines, journals, platforms, and newspapers. While the introduction provides a general report on the conference, discussing the principles according to which the panels were organized or describing and comparing the missions of some periodicals, the selection of questions from the audience and answers from editors that follow aim to convey different editorial strategies, political disputes, funding models, and relations to readership that one can encounter today in the field of art periodicals.
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Wittner, Lawrence S., and Nancy L. Roberts. "American Peace Writers, Editors, and Periodicals: A Dictionary." Journal of American History 79, no. 4 (1993): 1730. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2080390.

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Snitsarchuk, Lidiya. "Sources to the history of Ukrainian journalism in the Manuscripts Department of Ossolinski National Institute." Proceedings of Research and Scientific Institute for Periodicals, no. 9(27) (2019): 50–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.37222/2524-0331-2019-9(27)-4.

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The article identifies and describes the main groups of non-catalogued documents from Manuscripts Department of Ossolinski National Institute in Wroclaw, enabling the study of unknown pages of Ukrainian journalism history. The revealed documents made it possible to clarify new aspects of editors’, publishers’, journalists’ activity, to find out the unknown periodicals, as well as to enrich their «biographies» with new information. They are, in particular, the copies of Ukrainian newspapers, magazines and bulletins published in Austria, Poland, Germany in 1919–1921, editions issued in displaced persons’ camps, and early unknown handwritten student’s magazine «Vіstnyk» (1890) and its Polish language supplement «Dodatek do Vіstnyka». The author characterizes archival materials of Ukrainian newspapers’ editorial boards, such as of «Ukrainska Trybyna», «Ridnyi Krai», «Zyz», «Litopys Chervonoii Kalyny», «Ukraiinski Visti» and others. Mostly, they include authorized texts with editor’s marks, letters to correspondents and their answers, evidences about contributors, ways of forming the periodicals’ content, cooperation with polish journalists, as well as with editorial boards of other periodicals, both Ukrainian and foreign. The article stated the significance of different documents of the Ministry of Press and Propaganda of Ukrainian Peoples Republic’s Government as a historic source, especially those issued during so called Tarniv period. That is regulative and normative documents, reports, official correspondence by minister O. Kovalevskyi, heads and referents of Department of Press and Department of Propaganda V. Ostrovskyi, K. Vrotnovskyi-Syvoshapka, F. Krushynskyi, N. Hnatiuk and others. The author examines personal documents, which highlight the biographies of both prominent and little-known journalists, publishers, other persons closely cooperated with press. Private correspondence by F. Dudko, M. Yeremiiiv, O. Kovalevskyi, P. Kovzhun, M. Tverdokhlib, V. Pisniachevskyi, F. Khyzhniak, M. Yatskiv was especially emphasized, since besides private troubles, contains important discussions on media publishing, valuable information about periodicals they were working for and their reflections on the importance of journalism in general. Key words: history of Ukrainian Journalism, periodicals’ editorial boards, private correspondence, journalists, publishers.
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Jensz, Felicity. "The Function of Inaugural Editorials in Missionary Periodicals." Church History 82, no. 2 (2013): 374–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009640713000048.

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During the nineteenth century, over 300 missionary periodicals were established in Britain, along with hundreds in North America, Europe, and the colonial world, yet little has been written about the rationale behind their establishment. From their beginnings as sources of intelligence, periodicals developed into vehicles of influence by the first decades of the nineteenth century, with missionary organizations also using this reduplicated commodity to deliberately persuade and mold public attitudes. This article examines some thirty inaugural editorials and first volume prefaces to Protestant missionary periodicals, including those from “new series,” to uncover how editors justified their establishment to their potential readership.
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Vasic, Aleksandar. "Marxism and sociopolitical engagement in Serbian musical periodicals between the two world wars." Filozofija i drustvo 24, no. 3 (2013): 212–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fid1303212v.

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Between the two World Wars, in Belgrade and Serbia, seven musical journals were published: ?Musical Gazette? (1922), ?Music? (1928-1929), ?Herald of the Musical Society Stankovic? (1928-1934, 1938-1941; renamed to ?Musical Herald? in january 1931), ?Sound? (1932-1936), ?Journal of The South Slav Choral Union? (1935-1936, 1938), ?Slavic Music? (1939-1941) and ?Music Review? (1940). The influence of marxism can be observed in ?Musical Herald? (in the series from 1938), ?Sound? and ?Slavic Music?. A Marxist influence is obvious through indications of determinism. Namely, some writers (Dragutin Colic) observed elements of musical art and its history as (indirect) consequences of sociopolitical and economic processes. Still, journals published articles of domestic and foreign authors who interpreted the relation between music, society and economy in a much more moderate and subtle manner (D.Cvetko, A.Schering). Editors and associates of these journals also had proscriptive ambitions - they recommended and even determined regulations for composers about what kind of music to write according to social goals and needs. According to tendencies in Marxism, there was a follow up of musical work in the Soviet Union. Editors tried not to be one-sided. There were writings about the USSR by left orientated associates as much as emigrants from that country, and articles of Soviet authors were translated. Also, there were critical tones about musical development in the first country of socialism. Serbian musical periodicals recognized the enormous threat from fascism. Also, there were articles about influence of Nazi ideology and dictatorship on musical prospects in Germany. Since Germany annexed Sudetenland in 1938, ?Musical Herald? expressed support to musicians and people of that friendly country by devoting the October and November 1938 issue to Czechoslovak music, along with an appropriate introduction by the editor, Stana Djuric-Klajn.
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Parrott, Fred. "The word-watchers." English Today 4, no. 1 (1988): 17–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266078400003230.

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People complain to the editors of many periodicals about other people's usages. Teachers labour in many institutions to pass on shibboleths that they themselves were taught. Do such dedicated efforts make much difference to the language at large?
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Roos, Merethe. "To forsvar for teologien: trykkefrihet og teologiske tekstkulturer i svenske og danske tidsskrifter på slutten av 1700-tallet." 1700-tal: Nordic Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 12 (November 5, 2015): 161–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.7557/4.3530.

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Defending Theology: Freedom of the Press and Theological Textual Cultures in Swedish and Danish Periodicals at the Turn of the Eighteenth CenturyThis article examines the relationship between theology and freedom of the press in the periodicals Läsning i blandade ämnen (Stockholm 1797–1801) and Minerva (Copenhagen, 1785–1801). Sweden and Denmark were subject to different press regulations in the last decades of the eighteenth century, not least concerning theological issues. The editors of the periodicals in question sought to contribute to general enlightenment, and each of them published texts thematizing theological and religious issues. Through close reading of theological texts from these periodicals, the present study aims to demonstrate how the different press regulations in the two countries entailed a need for different presentations of Christian ideas during a period when dogmatic Christian teaching was challenged. This will in turn shed light on the role of these periodicals as far as public opinion regarding theology and theological themes in general is concerned.
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Erlandson, Rene J. "Women Editors and Publishers of Newspapers and Periodicals in Illinois." Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian 24, no. 1 (2005): 21–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j103v24n01_02.

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Rukhlin, Alexey N. "WORLD WAR I AND ITS REFLECTION IN SIMBIRSK AND SAMARA EPARCHIAL JOURNALS OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH." Vestnik Chuvashskogo universiteta, no. 4 (December 25, 2020): 126–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.47026/1810-1909-2020-4-126-138.

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The article examines the publishing activities of the provincial journals «Simbirsk Eparchial Bulletin and «Samara Eparchial Bulletin» during the world war of 1914–1917. In their periodicals, Church editors and journalists tried to support the sense of patriotism in the society and to justify Russia’s role and mission in the war against the «Teutonic hordes». Also by 1916, social problems and ideological decline of the Russian monarchy are traced the journals. The author has implemented a detailed scientific analysis of previously formed knowledge and scientific approach in order to identify knowledge about the editorial and publishing policy of the Russian Orthodox Church during the war. In his scientific research, the author was guided by the historical method or, as it is formulated in another way, the principle of historicism. When conducting this research, the author relied primarily on special historical and general historical methods. The reliability of the research is conditioned by the use of real archival periodicals published in 1914–1917. The article is highly topical because using specific examples the author shows the information capabilities of the Church periodical press in war conditions.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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Mudambanuki, Weston T. "News values of United Methodist Church editors." Virtual Press, 2003. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1259754.

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Twenty-two United Methodist Church (UMC) editors Q-sorted fifty-four news stories in this research study. The concourse was constructed using six news values mainly used by editors and reporters in the commercial news media: conflict, impact, magnitude, prominence, novelty, and proximity. The stories were sorted along an eleven point bi-polar continuum from "most important" to "least important"The study revealed that two kinds of editor perceptions emerged in the UMC: the denominational editors who selected news stories based on the proximity news element, and the ecumenical editor, who selected news stories based on the news elements of magnitude, impact, and novelty.Despite the use of these news values, the study also showed that the environmental factors such as organizational policies of the UMC and the bishops, influenced story selection for publication.<br>Department of Journalism
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Davies, Kayt. "Women's magazine editors story tellers and their cultural role /." Connect to thesis, 2009. http://adt.ecu.edu.au/adt-public/adt-ECU2009.0002.html.

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LeStage, Gregory. "Forces in the development of the British short story, 1930-1970 : some writers, editors, and periodicals." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.670227.

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Huffman, Holly D. "Organizational publications editors : their use of information subsidies and agenda setting." Virtual Press, 1999. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1136713.

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This study was designed to identify correlates of success in Supported Employment(SE) programs for persons with psychiatric disabilities. Indiana policy-makers are seriously considering a managed care, or "capitated," system of payment to make SE provider programs more efficient economically. However, many agencies are concerned about providing services to more severely impaired individuals because of the potentially higher costs of serving these individuals. Two studies are included in this project. The goals of the first study were to identify SE consumer (clinical) characteristics that predict (1) successful outcomes, defined as whether the consumer achieves gainful work, and (2) program costs, defined as the amounts of SE service hours utilized by consumers who obtain work. In two large samples of SE consumers with serious mental illness, no clinical characteristics (e.g., diagnosis, rated functioning, hospitalization history) were associated with vocational outcome or service costs. The goal of the second study was to describe the types and amounts of services utilized by SE consumers who obtain work. Specific service categories associated with obtaining work were travel, training, and advocacy that was unrelated to the consumer's job. The implications of these findings are discussed in the framework of the debate over clinical versus empirical prediction. The need for a theoretical model of SE services that allows the use of predictive clinical and consumer driven services is also discussed.<br>Department of Journalism
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Gunter, Heather M. "A Q study of Indiana religion editors' attitudes toward religion news." Virtual Press, 2000. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1177975.

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A study was conducted to determine what attitudes Indiana religion editors and reporters hold toward religion news and what attitude patterns exist among them.Using Q Methodology, this study explored the attitudes of religion reporters and editors at 22 Indiana daily newspapers. Newspapers included in the study had a religion reporter or editor who covered local religion news.The concourse for the study was developed by using statements from Ranly's 1977 study and from articles from trade and scholarly journals. The Q-sample included a total of 54 statements related to personal religious beliefs, the state of religion news and working as a journalist.The subjects completed a questionnaire, which included questions about their professional and religious background, and interviews were conducted with the subjects.The typical Indiana religion reporter was: a Caucasian female who had worked as a journalist for less than 10 years, who had held the position of religion reporter for less than five years, who held a bachelor's degree in journalism or English, and who had at least one college religion course. She had exposure to religion while growing up, is now involved in religious activities, and attends church weekly.QMETHOD software was used to tabulate the Q-sorts, and the investigator determined that two factors could be drawn out from the results. Hypothetical reporter types were labeled as "moderate" and "traditional." There was a high correlation between the two factors. Moderates were more news-oriented in their approach. They believe that religion news should be covered like any other news topic. Traditionalists were more faith-oriented. They believe that their faith and their jobs are not conflicting.<br>Department of Journalism
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Donoho, Stephen Halley. ""[A] humbled China will be more open to receive the salvation of Jesus Christ!" : two church periodicals' views on the Cing-Japanese war and Japanese-Táiwanese war." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/31432.

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There is writing about how nineteenth-century churchgoers' views of other countries were formed by church periodicals. And there is writing about how opinions of the Cing and Japanese Empires were changed by the 'Cing-Japanese War of 1894-1895' ('First Sino-Japanese War'; 'Jiá-wǔ War'), and the 'Japanese-Táiwanese War of 1895'. But, there are no works making connections between these bodies of writing. This work makes such a connection through a comparison of writing about the wars in two church periodicals, the England-based Monthly Messenger and Gospel in China , and the Táiwan-based 'Dāi-lám Church News' ('Dāi-lám Hu-siá n Gào-ho ê -b e'). It makes the argument that the periodicals' writers and editors were on the side of the Japanese, as it seemed to them that Japanese success against the Cing Empire, and Japanese rule in Tái-wan, would make Western ways commoner in these places, which would be good for the Protestant Churches there. But the writers and editors had to give their opinions differently, as their readers were in different positions with respect to the wars. The Monthly Messenger's readers were in England; nothing the writers said about the war would make them any less safe, and so in both wars the periodical gave its support to the Japanese loudly and frequently. But the Church News' readers and writers were in Tái-wan. Openly supporting an attacking country could put them in danger, so the writers said nothing for or against any side in the first war, and were but quietly against the Táiwanese Republic in the second.
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Italia, Iona. "Philosophers, knights-errant, coquettes and old maids : gender and literary self-consciousness in the eighteenth-century periodical (1690-1765)." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.343363.

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Daglas, Cristina Fennell John. "Point of view examining the magazine industry standard /." Diss., Columbia, Mo. : University of Missouri--Columbia, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10355/6584.

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The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file. Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on November 13, 2009). Thesis advisor: John Fennell. Includes bibliographical references.
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Somers, Tamara 1974. "Fashioning readings, fashioning selves : a comparative study of the American, Australian and French editions of VOGUE magazine, 1997-1999." Monash University, Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, 2001. http://arrow.monash.edu.au/hdl/1959.1/9132.

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Loughlin, M. Clare. "Charles Dickens as novelist, journalist and editor : the relationships among the constituent texts of 'Household Words' and 'All the Year Round'." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324776.

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Books on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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Roberts, Nancy L. American peace writers, editors, and periodicals: A dictionary. Greenwood Press, 1991.

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Koslow, Sally. Little pink slips: [a novel]. Berkley, 2008.

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Bite. Downtown Press, 2003.

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Xue bao gong cheng yu zhu bian yi shi: An li, fen xi = Xuebao gongcheng yu zhubian yishi. Heilongjiang ren min chu ban she, 2010.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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1954-, Stewart Tony K., ed. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Leglar, Mary A. Handbook for editors of State Music Education Association journals. MENC - the National Association for Music Education, 2000.

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Leglar, Mary A. Handbook for editors of State Music Education Association journals. MENC - the National Association for Music Education, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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Ledbetter, Kathryn. "Editors and Magazine Poets." In British Victorian Women's Periodicals. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230620186_5.

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Batchelor, Jennie, and Manushag N. Powell. "Introduction: Women and the Birth of Periodical Culture." In Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1690-1820s. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474419659.003.0001.

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The editors of this volume assert that periodical studies and feminist studies within the British eighteenth century are inseparable activities. While male authors dominated eighteenth-century periodicals, it does not follow that the form itself existed or could have existed independent of women: quite the opposite was true. From John Dunton’s Athenian Mercury (1690–7) to the Tatler (1709–11) and Spectator (1710-11), to Eliza Haywood’s Female Spectator (1744–6), to the magazines like the Lady’s Museum (1760–1) or Lady’s Magazine (1770–1832) that filled out the later portion of the period, women were avid readers of, contributors to, and consumers fostered through periodical culture: the form was thoroughly tied up in the ‘fair-sexing’ upon which it founded itself – but, the editors contend, ‘fair-sexing’ is only one part of the story. Tracing the conditions that affect periodical scholarship, such as limited publishers’ archives and the challenges of digital scholarship, the introduction also considers the question of readership, and, with it, nomenclature: what does it mean to call a periodical a Lady’s paper? Resisting the traditional separation between essay and magazine, this introduction seeks to alert the reader to a more flexible and capacious understanding of how periodicals interact with one another, and with the women who enable them.
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Mutch, Deborah. "Making Space for Women: The Labour Leader, the Clarion, and the Women’s Column." In Women, Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1830s-1900s. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474433907.003.0023.

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In this essay, Deborah Mutch considers the women’s columns of two socialist periodicals in the 1890s: the Labour Leader (1894–1922), edited by Keir Hardie, and the Clarion (1891–1935), edited by Robert Blatchford. In spite of the progressive, ethical brand of socialism promoted by the two male editors, Mutch demonstrates that broader anxieties about the place of women within the socialist movement can be mapped spatially in their periodicals. What emerges from a spatial analysis of the women’s columns in both is a clear sense of the relationship between column inches and the gender politics that undergirds each periodical’s editorial agenda. Measuring the space allocated to women in both periodicals yields the conclusion that ‘women’s voices and women’s problems held only a fraction of the importance of men’s,’ which functions to further highlight the ‘marginal position’ that women occupied within British socialism at this time (p. 377).
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Holden, Katherine. "Friendship and Support, Conflict and Rivalry: Multiple Uses of the Correspondence Column in Childcare Magazines, 1919–39." In Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1918-1939. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474412537.003.0020.

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This chapter examines a variety of ways in which correspondence columns of the childcare magazine Nursery World and two in-house nursery nursing college magazines were used by readers during the interwar years. The columns offered editors useful ways to communicate with readers and discover what aspects of the magazine they preferred. Publishing letters where readers shared views and answered one another’s problems kept debates over maternal authority, nannies’ class and education, and social isolation alive and relevant to readers. However, letters to the college magazines tended to be more uncontroversial, most commonly featuring letters from abroad often commissioned by the editor. Overall, ways in which editors responded to complaints and praise mediated between warring factions and encouraged their ‘imagined community’ of readers to feel less isolated are clear both in the selection of letters published and the responses given to them.
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Kane, Louise. "Computer Science for (Live) Modernism(s)?" In Modernist Objects. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781949979503.003.0007.

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This chapter frames little magazines and periodicals as modernist objects which are often preoccupied with their own materiality in a distinct and unprecedented manner. To illustrate this principle, I argue that the little magazine represents the textual equivalent of what is known in the field of Computer Science as a metaobject, a part of a computer system that has the power to modify and update itself via a process known as reflection. While the production of a book—the typesetting, printing, and assemblage or ‘gathering’ of pages tended to take place out of the sight of their writers, the limited economic funds of a little magazine meant that their editors had a direct role in the print process. Drawing on examples from global periodicals including the British Rhythm, the Japanese periodical Shirakaba, the American Crisis and Little Review, I argue that it is periodicals’ status as metaobjects that makes them modernist. Their editors’ material choices and continued self-conscious references to the magazine as object (often with a set object) produce uniquely subjective, live reading experiences which characterize magazines as indelibly modern. Their modernisms—able to be experienced just through reading the magazine – are therefore timeless and can be replayed again and again.
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Dunbar, Robert. "The Gaelic Press." In The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 3. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424929.003.0018.

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Throughout the period in question, Gaelic periodical publishing has faced a number of persistent problems: relatively small, and declining, numbers of speakers, comparatively low levels of literacy in the language, insufficient institutional support, and editors and writers working for little material reward. As a result, most Gaelic periodicals survived for relatively short periods, and aside from the weekly Mac-Talla, published in Canada from 1892 to 1904, there has never been a Gaelic newspaper of any significance. In spite of this, Gaelic periodicals made a major contribution to Gaelic literature and culture more generally, serving as a platform for new generations of Gaelic writers, a conduit for new styles, particularly of modernist Gaelic poetry, and new genres, such as the short story, plays, social and political comment, current affairs, humour, literary translation, and much else.
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Clarke, Clare. "‘I simply write it to order’: L. T. Meade, Sisters of Sherlock, and the Strand Magazine." In Women, Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1830s-1900s. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474433907.003.0030.

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Clare Clarke’s essay illuminates the adroit professionalism of the Irish author, journalist, and editor L. T. Meade (1844–1914) in the context of the extensive catalogue of detective fiction she contributed to the Strand Magazine (1891–1950). Meade’s foray into the detective genre followed an enormously successful period of writing novels for girls, as well as a stint at editing the girls’ magazine Atalanta (1887–98). As Clarke demonstrates, this radical departure from her literary focus on girls’ print culture is indicative of Meade’s ‘market acuity, her ability to produce precisely those genres which were in demand by periodical editors–in her own terms, her ability to give a literary editor “what his public want[s]”’ (p. 474). Meade’s talent for tapping into market trends and producing copy that catered to the tastes of readers ultimately secured her position as a regular contributor in the male-dominated Strand Magazine.
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Demoor, Marysa. "Editors and the Nineteenth-Century Press." In The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century British Periodicals and Newspapers. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315613345-7.

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Ehnes, Caley. "The New Shilling Monthlies: Macmillan’s Magazine and The Cornhill." In Victorian Poetry and the Poetics of the Literary Periodical. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474418348.003.0003.

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This chapter turns its attention to the shilling monthly as represented by the originators of the genre: Macmillan’s Magazine and the Cornhill. These periodicals represent a particular moment in literary history in which the shilling monthly explicitly functioned to reinforce and define middle-class cultural tastes and traditions. This chapter thus considers how the editors of Macmillan’s and the Cornhill used poetry to support the cultural and literary aims of their respective periodicals, shaping the poetic landscape of the 1860s through their editorial decisions (e.g. each periodical took a side in the era’s debate over hexameters). The first third of the chapter traces Alexander Macmillan’s influence on the poetry of Macmillan’s through the work of Alfred Tennyson, Dinah Mulock Craik, and Christina Rossetti. The remainder of the chapter focuses on William Thackeray’s role as paterfamilias of the Cornhill through an examination of poems by Matthew Arnold, Adelaide Anne Procter, Owen Meredith, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning (among others).
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Marshall, Catherine. "The Editors of the Metaphysical Society, or Disseminating the Ideas of the Metaphysicians." In The Metaphysical Society (1869-1880). Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198846499.003.0003.

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Twelve out of sixty-two members of the Metaphysical Society were active editors of well-known periodicals or weeklies throughout the eleven years of existence of the Society. Their editorial skills and choices all reveal the complex links between the Metaphysicians, the views they defended, and the periodicals in which they expressed their opinions. These editors published forty-four out of the ninety-five papers given by the members. In so doing, they contributed to some of the changes which were taking place in journalism by finding new ways of generating creative responses to main topics, and they enriched printed controversies, thereby targeting a wider middle-class audience throughout the 1870s. This chapter argues that the Society became—for its editors and other regular contributors—another kind of hub for cooperation that intersected with their editorial interests and that, in so doing, they were the great amplifiers of the debates of the Society in the 1870s.
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Conference papers on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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Stanislavchik, A. O. "TRANSLATION AND TRANSLATORS IN SOUTHWESTERN REGIONAL LITERARY PERIODICALS OF THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE: QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ODESSAN EDITIONS." In ACTUAL PROBLEMS OF LINGUISTICS AND LITERARY STUDIES. Publishing House of Tomsk State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-94621-901-3-2020-112.

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Reports on the topic "Periodicals editors"

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Prysyazhnyi, Mykhaylo. UNIQUE, BUT UNCOMPLETED PROJECTS (FROM HISTORY OF THE UKRAINIAN EMIGRANT PRESS). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11093.

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In the article investigational three magazines which went out after Second World war in Germany and Austria in the environment of the Ukrainian emigrants, is «Theater» (edition of association of artists of the Ukrainian stage), «Student flag» (a magazine of the Ukrainian academic young people is in Austria), «Young friends» (a plastoviy magazine is for senior children and youth). The thematic structure of magazines, which is inferior the association of different on age, is considered, by vital experience and professional orientation of people in the conditions of the forced emigration, paid regard to graphic registration of magazines, which, without regard to absence of the proper publisher-polydiene bases, marked structuralness and expressiveness. A repertoire of periodicals of Ukrainian migration is in the American, English and French areas of occupation of Germany and Austria after Second world war, which consists of 200 names, strikes the tipologichnoy vseokhopnistyu and testifies to the high intellectual level of the moved persons, desire of yaknaynovishe, to realize the considerable potential in new terms with hope on transference of the purchased experience to Ukraine. On ruins of Europe for two-three years the network of the press, which could be proud of the European state is separately taken, is created. Different was a period of their appearance: from odnogo-dvokh there are to a few hundred numbers, that it is related to intensive migration of Ukrainians to the USA, Canada, countries of South America, Australia. But indisputable is a fact of forming of conceptions of newspapers and magazines, which it follows to study, doslidzhuvati and adjust them to present Ukrainian realities. Here not superfluous will be an example of a few editions on the thematic range of which the names – «Plastun» specify, «Skob», «Mali druzi», «Sonechko», «Yunackiy shliah», «Iyzhak», «Lys Mykyta» (satire, humour), «Literaturna gazeta», «Ukraina і svit», «Ridne slovo», «Hrystyianskyi shliah», «Golos derzhavnyka», «Ukrainskyi samostiynyk», «Gart», «Zmag» (sport), «Litopys politviaznia», «Ukrains’ka shkola», «Torgivlia i promysel», «Gospodars’ko-kooperatyvne zhyttia», «Ukrainskyi gospodar», «Ukrainskyi esperantist», «Radiotehnik», «Politviazen’», «Ukrainskyi selianyn» Considering three riznovektorni magazines «Teatr» (edition of Association Mistciv the Ukrainian Stage), «Studentskyi prapor» (a magazine of the Ukrainian academic young people is in Austria), «Yuni druzi» (a plastoviy magazine is for senior children and youth) assert that maintenance all three magazines directed on creation of different on age and by the professional orientation of national associations for achievement of the unique purpose – cherishing and maintainance of environments of ukrainstva, identity, in the conditions of strange land. Without regard to unfavorable publisher-polydiene possibilities, absence of financial support and proper encouragement, release, followed the intensive necessity of concentration of efforts for achievement of primary purpose – receipt and re-erecting of the Ukrainian State.
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