1st Edition
The Routledge Companion to Transnational Journalism History
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Introduction
Part I Transnational Networks
1. The Emergence of the Journalist, Public Opinion, and the Modern Newspaper
Elizabeth Bond
2. A History of Transnational Journalism and Revolutions
Debra Reddin van Tuyll
3. The Transnational Nineteenth-Century Illustrated Press
Thomas Smits
4. Press Agencies
Heidi Tworek and Elizabeth Wu Ren
5. Diasporic Journalism and Radical Networks: The Transnational Anarchist Press
Andrew Hoyt
6. Women’s Press
Jane L. Chapman
7. International Correspondents
Elisabeth Fondren and Natascha Toft Roelsgaard
8. Journalism Education
Carlos Barrera
9. Transnational Radio Broadcasting
Richard Legay
10. Transnational News Broadcasters
Chris Paterson and Jasmin Surm
Part II: Media and Technology
11. Journalism as Office Work
Johan Jarlbrink
12. Technological Progress and the Beginnings of a Global Public Sphere: The Role of Telegraphy in Transnational Journalism History
Lisa Bolz
13. Computers
Will Mari
14. Early forms of Language and Data Codification, Journaling, and Keeping: From Pre-Hispanic Settings to the Datification of Progress
Eddy Borges-Rey and Jairo Lugo-Ocando
15. From Shorthand to Mobile Phones: A Brief Transnational History of Journalism Recording Technologies
Nelanthi Hewa
Part III Genres and Practice
16. Transnational Popular Journalism
Martin Conboy
17. Tracking Literary Journalism’s Transatlantic Migrations: A Transnational Approach
John S. Bak
18. The History of Cultural Journalism from a Transnational Perspective
Nete Norgaard Kristensen
19. Moving Pictures: Photojournalism History through a Transnational Lens
Amanda Zanco and Annie Rudd
20. The Transnational Diffusion of Interviewing and the Interview
Marcel Broersma
21. On-site Reporting in the Netherlands: Transnational Patterns and National Idiosyncrasies of an Emerging Professional Practice and Form, 1880–1930
Frank Harbers
22. War Correspondence
Natasha Toft Roelsgaard
23. Parliamentary Reporting
Betto van Waarden
24. Transnational Humour
Bob Nicholson
Part IV Transnational Transfer and Agents
25. What is Anglo-American Journalism? Or Does it even Exist?
Mark Hampton
26. Anglo-Irish Interactions: Journalism in Ireland and Great Britain
Mark O’Brien
27. Australian Journalism and its British and American Connections
Sally Young
28. Transnational Journalism: Britain, North America (USA), and France
Michael B. Palmer
29. East and West during the Cold War
Kevin Grieves
30. Two Centuries of Russian Journalism Before 1917: European Journalism as an Ultimate Other
Olga Kruglikova and Anna Smoliarova
31. Estonian Journalistic Methods and Genres in the Early 1900s
Halliki Harro-Loit
32. Portuguese Press in the Dawn of the Twentieth Century: Innovation and Influential Trends in the ‘New’ News
Helena Lima
33. The Liminality and Hybridity of a Transnational Space of Exchange: Chinese Journalism and the West
Yi Guo
34. Wang Xiaoting 王小亭 (1900–1981): Journalist and Cultural Intermediary in Shanghai
Anna Elizabeth Herren
35. The French Colonial Press
Laure Demougin
Index
Biography
Frank Harbers is Associate Professor at the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies at the University of Groningen, Netherlands.
Mark O’Brien is Professor of Journalism History and Head of the School of Communications at Dublin City University, Ireland.
Debra Reddin van Tuyll is Professor Emerita at Augusta University, USA.
Marcel Broersma is Professor of Media and Journalism at the University of Groningen, Netherlands.






