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[Commlist] Newspapers as Miscellany Symposium
Thu Oct 20 21:14:05 GMT 2022
*At the crossroads of modernity: Newspapers as miscellany from the 1880s*
*Centre for the Study of Journalism and History, University of
Sheffield, 19 May 2023*
**
What do newspapers tell us about the times they were printed in and
read? Most research into newspapers concentrates on them as purveyors of
news or as contributors to political debate. This underestimates the
rich, untapped potential of what has always characterised newspapers,
namely their miscellany. Newspapers, in content and presentation, have
always incorporated a mixture of styles and topics. In fact, it is this
very miscellany that has driven interest from willing purchasers and
added attractiveness to advertisers, certain of a mixed readership of
taste. Concentrating on the more ephemeral aspects of newspapers as
opposed to the coverage of high politics may tell us more about their
attractiveness as a media form.
This miscellany grew to its full potential in the popular press, broadly
defined, from the 1880s. Technological innovation adopted within
journalism’s existing practices enabled the development of a rich
variety of formats all dedicated to increasing market share by
attracting wider readerships across social class and gendered
boundaries. This was manifested in, not exhaustively, the incorporation
of photos, cartoons, new layout templates, sport, cross-exploitation of
films, fiction, television and celebrity, gossip and readers’ letters.
This symposium encourages contributions to this exploration of
newspapers across a long twentieth century as a meeting point and
melting pot of inter-media influences, extending the potential of
newspapers as a conduit to new approaches to the study of popular
culture and history.
We invite proposals, of max 400 words, for 20-minute papers, to be sent
to (james.whitworth /at/ sheffield.ac.uk)
<mailto:(james.whitworth /at/ sheffield.ac.uk)> by Friday 20 January. We are
not prescriptive in terms of national contexts and we encourage both
international and transnational explorations.
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