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Sensational Page 34

by Kim Todd


  –––. “News Summary.” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, October 16, 1872.

  –––. “Political.” Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, March 23, 1872.

  –––. [Morning Journal Ad]. St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 25, 1883.

  –––. [No Title]. World, May 11, 1883.

  –––. “Want Ads.” Pittsburg Dispatch, January 11–17, 1885.

  –––. “Lonely Orphan Girl.” Pittsburg Dispatch, January 17, 1885.

  –––. “The City.” Chicago Tribune, June 25, 1885.

  –––. “Ownership of the Examiner.” San Francisco Examiner, March 4, 1887.

  –––. Journalist V, no. 25 (September 10, 1887).

  –––. Journalist V, no. 26 (September 17, 1887).

  –––. “Who Is This Insane Girl?” Sun, September 25, 1887.

  –––. “In and About Town. A Mysterious Waif. Bellevue Shelters a Girl of Whom Nothing Is Known.” New York Times, September 26, 1887.

  –––. “Mrs. Robinson’s Fatal Leap. A Louisville Woman’s Suicide,” New-York Tribune, October 10, 1887.

  –––. “Playing Mad Woman.” Sun, October 14, 1887.

  –––. “She Ran Away from Home.” Evening World, October 14, 1887.

  –––. “A Bride Choked with Gas.” Evening World, October 15, 1887.

  –––. “He Dug Her Grave.” Daily Arkansas Gazette, October 15, 1887.

  –––. “Can Doctors Tell Insanity?” Sun, October 23, 1887.

  –––. “Smarter Than All of Them.” Hazel Green Herald, December 9, 1887.

  –––. [No title]. Salt Lake Herald, December 9, 1887.

  –––. “An Interesting Book.” Ohio Democrat, December 17, 1887.

  –––. “The Times Transferred.” Inter Ocean, December 25, 1887.

  –––. “Woman’s Department.” Iola Register, December 30, 1887.

  –––. “The New Chicago Times.” Marion Star, January 13, 1888.

  –––. “Howard’s Gossip.” Boston Globe, January 20, 1888.

  –––. “Woman’s World and Work.” Times-Picayune, March 25, 1888.

  –––. “A Crusade for Women.” St. Paul Globe, April 1, 1888.

  –––. “Serious Charge.” Buffalo News, April 3, 1888.

  –––. “A Case for Eva Gay.” St. Paul Globe, April 7, 1888.

  –––. “Our Female Strikers.” St. Paul Globe, April 19, 1888.

  –––. [No Title]. Chicago Times, April 22, 1888.

  –––. “Minneapolis News.” St. Paul Globe, May 11, 1888.

  –––. “A Committee of Jobbers.” St. Paul Globe, May 12, 1888.

  –––. “The Plain Facts.” Minneapolis Tribune, May 13, 1888.

  –––. “Our Girls.” St. Paul Globe, June 3, 1888.

  –––. “Zenith City Items.” Duluth Daily News, June 8, 1888.

  –––. “Very Close to the Wall.” St. Paul Globe, June 14, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 6, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 10, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 11, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 13, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 14, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 16, 1888.

  –––. “City Slave Girls.” Chicago Times, August 19, 1888.

  –––. “Elopement of a Girl Reporter.” Chicago Tribune, September 27, 1888.

  –––. “May Dougherty Didn’t Elope.” Watertown News, October 3, 1888.

  –––. “Special to the Trade.” St. Paul Globe, October 4, 1888.

  –––. “She Journalists.” Buffalo Sunday Morning News, October 7, 1888.

  –––. “Kittie Smith’s Death.” Inter Ocean, November 27, 1888.

  –––. “The Chicago Sensation.” St. Paul Globe, December 20, 1888.

  –––. “A Novel Enterprise.” Buffalo Times, December 24, 1888.

  –––. “Minneapolis.” St. Paul Globe, December 24, 1888.

  –––. “Tansy Pills.” Boston Globe, December 30, 1888.

  –––. “Is It a Plot?” San Francisco Chronicle, January 3, 1889.

  –––. “Seeking the Remedy.” Chicago Times, January 3, 1889.

  –––. “Mrs. Lowenstein’s Story.” Sun, January 5, 1889.

  –––. “Circuit.” Inter Ocean, January 9, 1889.

  –––. “They’re Coming, $250,000 Strong.” Sterling Daily Gazette, January 9, 1889.

  –––. “The Infanticide Revelations.” Journal of the American Medical Association XII, no. 2 (January 12, 1889).

  –––. “Schaack and Bonfield.” Evening Bulletin, January 12, 1889.

  –––. “Taking in the Town.” Ashland Weekly News, January 23, 1889.

  –––. “Medical.” San Francisco Examiner, February 18, 1889.

  –––. [Entire Issue]. Journalist, January 26, 1889.

  –––. “Found Dead in Bed.” St. Paul Globe, April 8, 1889.

  –––. “The ‘Journal’ on Editor West.” Chicago Tribune, July 24, 1889.

  –––. “In Financial Straits.” Sioux City Journal, July 25, 1889.

  –––. “Personals.” San Francisco Examiner, August 27, 1889.

  –––. “Written in Red.” San Francisco Examiner, September 8, 1889.

  –––. “Bly Against Bisland.” San Francisco Examiner, November 19, 1889.

  –––. “James J. West.” Sun, December 24, 1889.

  –––. The World, Its History and New Home. New York: G. W. Turner, [1890].

  –––. “Saved from Death!” San Francisco Examiner, January 4, 1890.

  –––. “Inefficient Life-Saving Service.” San Francisco Examiner, January 7, 1890.

  –––. “He Would Thrash Her!” San Francisco Examiner, January 20, 1890.

  –––. “Dr. Harrison Ousted.” San Francisco Examiner, January 22, 1890.

  –––. “Nellie Bly Hastens On.” San Francisco Examiner, January 22, 1890.

  –––. “The Receiving Hospital.” Daily Alta California, January 23, 1890.

  –––. “Nellie Bly There.” Pittsburg Dispatch, January 26, 1890.

  –––. “Miss Virginia Cusack Missing.” Chicago Tribune, March 18, 1890.

  –––. “Virginia Cusack Heard From.” Chicago Tribune, March 19, 1890.

  –––. “Nellie Bly and Her Book.” Harrisburg Telegraph, July 24, 1890.

  –––. “Ethel’s Game a Bold One.” Chicago Tribune, November 16, 1890.

  –––. “Have You Got the Nerve?” Sioux City Journal, December 13, 1890.

  –––. “Mr. Dana on Self-Education.” Philadelphia Inquirer, April 12, 1891.

  –––. “Honeymoons.” St. Paul Globe, July 9, 1892.

  –––. “Did She Kill Them?” Logansport Reporter, August 6, 1892.

  –––. “His Daughter.” Boston Post, August 6, 1892.

  –––. “Lizzie Borden’s Sunday.” New York Times, August 29, 1892.

  –––. “Mrs. Leslie.” Standard Union, November 4, 1892.

  –––. “Her Many Aliases.” Pittsburgh Press, November 26, 1892.

  –––. “The Real Annie Laurie.” San Francisco Examiner, December 18, 1892.

  –––. [Entire issue]. World, May 7, 1893.

  –––. “Tompkins May Die.” Chicago Tribune, October 25, 1893.

  –––. “His Loved Ones Lost.” Inter Ocean, October 25, 1893.

  –––. “Tompkins’ Mother Arrives.” Chicago Tribune, October 27, 1893.

  –––. “The Wares of Autolycus.” Pall Mall Gazette, November 22, 1893.

  –––. “Will Give Them Aid.” Evening World, December 6, 1893.

  –––. “The Usual Result.” Evening World, December 6, 1893.

 
; –––. “‘Del’s’” on His List.” World, December 7, 1893.

  –––. [Entire issue]. Boston Post, February 11, 1894.

  –––. “He Saw Nellie Bly.” September 11, 1894.

  –––. “Is ‘Nellie Bly’ Married?” Indianapolis Journal, April 7, 1895.

  –––. “A Red Hot Debate.” Mansfield News, April 8, 1895.

  –––. “She’s No Longer a Miss.” San Francisco Call, April 14, 1895.

  –––. “A Stroke for Freedom.” San Francisco Examiner, April 15, 1895.

  –––. “Oatmeal and Mackerel.” Buffalo Morning Express, April 16, 1895.

  –––. “Brighter Outlook.” Weekly Pioneer-Times, April 18, 1895.

  –––. “Ida Wells to Wed.” San Francisco Chronicle, June 13, 1895.

  –––. “The Observant Citizen.” Boston Post, June 21, 1895.

  –––. “A Missing Woman Is Found at Last.” San Francisco Chronicle, September 25, 1895.

  –––. “For Dogging ‘Nellie Bly.’” Sun, November 10, 1895.

  –––. “Nellie Bly Still at It.” Sun, November 11, 1895.

  –––. “Nervy Nellie Bly.” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. November 30, 1895.

  –––. “The National Colored Woman’s Congress.” The Woman’s Era II, no. 9 (January 1896).

  –––. “Daring Deeds by the Sunday World’s Intrepid Woman Reporters.” World, March 8, 1896.

  –––. “Chroniclings.” Democrat and Chronicle, March 31, 1896, 6.

  –––. “Elizabeth Banks Will Write Us Up.” New York Journal, October 14, 1896.

  –––. “Notes on the New Journalism.” Sun, October 21, 1896.

  –––. “Gotham’s Great Epidemic.” Indianapolis Journal, February 4, 1897.

  –––. “Tale of a Fair Exile.” World, February 15, 1897.

  –––. “Vile Newspapers Put Out.” Sun, March 10, 1897.

  –––. “Mask and Wig’s New Burlesque.” Times, March 28, 1897.

  –––. “How the Great Murder Mystery Was Unraveled.” New York Journal, July 4, 1897.

  –––. “Negro Girls Sold into Bondage: Young Women, Decoyed from the South by False Promises of Work, Become Slaves of White and Negro Masters,” New York Evening Telegram, September 20, 1897.

  –––. “The People Unite with the Journal to Welcome Miss Cisneros to Freedom.” New York Journal, October 17, 1897.

  –––. “Fines Law.” Boston Globe, February 9, 1898.

  –––. “Agree or Quit.” Boston Globe, February 11, 1898.

  –––. “Destruction of the War Ship Maine was the Work of an Enemy.” New York Journal, February 17, 1898.

  –––. “Maine Explosion Caused by Bomb or Torpedo?” World, February 17, 1898.

  –––. “War! Sure!” New York Journal, February 17, 1898.

  –––. [No Title]. Hartford Courant, March 12, 1898.

  –––. “Congress Declares War.” New York Journal, April 25, 1898.

  –––. “Ellsworth, His Bill.” Buffalo Weekly Express, October 13, 1898.

  –––. “The White Rose Mission.” Sun, September 24, 1899.

  –––. “Lectures on Cooking.” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 23, 1901.

  –––. “‘The Muck Rake Brigade’–by Theodore Roosevelt.” Bismarck Tribune, April 16, 1906.

  –––. “School of Cookery Will Open Monday.” Star-Gazette, June 16, 1908.

  –––. “Equipment.” Editor and Publisher, August 10, 1910.

  –––. “Plan Journalistic Course.” New-York Tribune, March 23, 1912.

  –––. “The Lady Doc.” Tennessean, October 20, 1912.

  –––. “Suffrage Tea on the Lawn.” Courier-News, June 15, 1915.

  –––. “What the Women Are Doing in the War.” Courier-News, March 21, 1917.

  –––. “Teacher for 32 Years; Sent to Insane Asylum.” Chicago Tribune, May 8, 1924.

  Abbot, Willis, J. Watching the World Go By. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1933.

  Adams, Katherine H., and Michael L. Keene. Winifred Black/Annie Laurie and the Making of Modern Nonfiction. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2015.

  Arnesen, Eric, ed. Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-Class History. New York: Routledge, 2007.

  Bab. “Quill Drivers.” Daily Arkansas Gazette, April 30, 1893.

  Bierce, Ambrose. “A Thumb-Nail Sketch.” In The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Vol. XII. New York: Neale Publishing Company, 1912.

  Bishop, Elizabeth, and Robert Lowell. Words in Air, The Complete Correspondence of Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2008.

  Bisland, Elizabeth. A Flying Trip Around the World. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1891.

  Beard, Mary. Women & Power: A Manifesto. 1st American ed. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation, 2017.

  Bogart, R. D. “Columbia Politics.” St. Paul Globe, January 29, 1888.

  Boynton, Robert. The New New Journalism. New York: Vintage Books, 2005.

  Brann, W. C. “Women in Journalism.” In Brann the Iconoclast. Waco, TX: Herz Brothers, 1898.

  Brier, Bud. “Under the Rose.” Boston Globe, July 18, 1892.

  Brisbane, Arthur. “Great Problems in Organization: The Modern Newspaper in War Time.” Cosmopolitan 25 (September 1898).

  Brodie, Janet Farrell. Contraception and Abortion in Nineteenth-Century America. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1997.

  Browder, Clifford. The Wickedest Woman in New York: Madame Restell, the Abortionist. Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1988.

  Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. Aurora Leigh. London: Chapman and Hall, 1857.

  Burrows, J. “‘Delta’: A Measure of Stylistic Difference and a Guide to Likely Authorship.” Literary and Linguistic Computing 17, no. 3 (September 1, 2002).

  Cahoon, H. H. “Women in Gutter Journalism,” Arena 17 (December 1896–June 1897).

  Campbell, Helen Stuart. Prisoners of Poverty. Cambridge, MA: John Wilson and Son, 1887.

  Campbell, W. Joseph. Yellow Journalism: Puncturing the Myths, Defining the Legacies. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001.

  Chapin, Charles. Charles Chapin’s Story, Written in Sing Sing Prison. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1920.

  Clayton, John. The Cowboy Girl: The Life of Caroline Lockhart. Women in the West. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2007.

  Coey, A. J. “Demands an Investigation.” Inter Ocean, December 23, 1888.

  Commander, Lydia. “The Significance of Yellow Journalism.” Arena 34 (August 1905).

  Conner, Eliza Archard. “A Woman’s World in Paragraphs.” Vancouver Daily World, November 11, 1892.

  Crane, Stephen. Active Service. New York: International Association of Newspapers and Authors, 1901.

  Dare, Helen. “Flying the Flume for Forty Miles.” San Francisco Examiner, July 26, 1896.

  Davidson, James West. They Say: Ida B. Wells and the Reconstruction of Race. New Narratives in American History. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.

  Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay. Lifting as They Climb. Washington DC: National Association of Colored Women, 1933.

  Davis, Richard Harding. “Does Our Flag Shield Women?” New York Journal, February 12, 1897.

  Del Carmen, Rolando V. Criminal Procedure: Law and Practice. 7th ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth, 2007.

  Dickens, Charles. American Notes for General Circulation. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1842.

  Didion, Joan. Slouching Towards Bethlehem. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1968.

  Dyer, Justin Buckley. Slavery, Abortion, and the Politics of Constitutional Meaning. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2013.

  Eder, Maciej. “Authorship Verification with the Package ‘Stylo.’” Computational Stylistics Group, 2018, https://computationalstylistics.github.io/blog/imposters/.

  Ehrenreich, Barbara. Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 20
01.

  Fahs, Alice. Out on Assignment: Newspaper Women and the Making of Modern Public Space. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2011.

  Faludi, Susan. In the Darkroom. 1st ed. New York: Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt and Company, 2016.

  Faue, Elizabeth. Writing the Wrongs: Eva Valesh and the Rise of Labor Journalism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2002.

  Freeman, Barbara M. Kit’s Kingdom: The Journalism of Kathleen Blake Coleman. Ottawa: Carlton University Press, 1989.

  Galenson, Walter. The United Brotherhood of Carpenters: The First Hundred Years. Wertheim Publications in Industrial Relations. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1983.

  Gardiner, Becky, Mahana Mansfield, et al. “The Dark Side of Guardian Comments.” Guardian, April 12, 2016, https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/apr/12/the-dark-side-of-guardian-comments.

  Giddings, Paula. Ida: A Sword Among Lions: Ida B. Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching. New York: HarperCollins, 2008.

  Gladstone, Rick. “Tales Told Out of School in Pyongyang Cause Stir.” New York Times, November 30, 2014.

  Green, Casey Edward, and Shelly Henley Kelly, eds. Through a Night of Horrors: Voices from the 1900 Galveston Storm. College Station: Texas A & M University Press, 2000.

  Green, Nathan, ed. Story of the Galveston Flood. Baltimore: R. H. Woodward Company, 1900.

  Greenwood, James. A Night in a Workhouse. London: Office of the Pall Mall Gazette, 1866.

  Grossman, Barbara Wallace. A Spectacle of Suffering: Clara Morris on the American Stage. Theater in the Americas. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2009.

  H. F. “Church Scorned by Wales.” New York Times, April 29, 1894.

  Haggard, Stephan. “Suki Kim: ‘Without You There is No Us: My Time with the Sons of North Korea’s Elite.’” North Korea: Witness to Transformation blog, 2015, https://www.piie.com/blogs/north-korea-witness-transformation/suki-kim-without-you-there-no-us-my-time-sons-north-koreas.

  Hamlin, Kimberly A. From Eve to Evolution: Darwin, Science, and Women’s Rights in Gilded Age America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2014.

  Hawthorne, Julian. The Story of Evangelina Cisneros. New York: Continental Publishing Company, 1897.

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel. “Mrs. Hutchinson.” Tales and Sketches. Library of America, 1982.

  Hayes, Albert H. The Physiology of Woman and her Diseases. Boston: Peabody Medical Institute, 1869.

 

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