Sympathy, Madness, and Crime: How Four Nineteenth-Century Journalists Made the Newspaper Women’s Business

Author:   Karen Roggenkamp
Publisher:   Kent State University Press
ISBN:  

9781606352878


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   30 October 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Sympathy, Madness, and Crime: How Four Nineteenth-Century Journalists Made the Newspaper Women’s Business


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Overview

In one of her escapades as a reporter for Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World, the renowned Nellie Bly feigned insanity in 1889 and slipped, undercover, behind the grim walls of Blackwell’s Island mental asylum. She emerged ten days later with a vivid tale about life in a madhouse. Her asylum articles merged sympathy and sensationalism, highlighting a developing professional identity—that of the American newspaperwoman. The Blackwell’s Island story is just one example of how newspaperwomen used sympathetic rhetoric to depict madness and crime while striving to establish their credentials as professional writers. Working against critics who would deny them access to the newsroom, Margaret Fuller, Fanny Fern, Nellie Bly, and Elizabeth Jordan subverted the charge that women were not emotionally equipped to work for mass-market newspapers. They transformed their supposed liabilities into professional assets, and Sympathy, Madness, and Crime explores how, in writing about insane asylums, the mentally ill, prisons, and criminals, each deployed a highly gendered sympathetic language to excavate a professional space within a male-dominated workplace. As the periodical market burgeoned, these pioneering, courageous women exemplified how narrative sympathy opened female space within the “hard news” city room of America’s largest newspapers. Sympathy, Madness, and Crime offers a new chapter in the unfolding histories of nineteenth-century periodical culture, women’s professional authorship, and the narrative construction of American penal and psychiatric institutions.

Full Product Details

Author:   Karen Roggenkamp
Publisher:   Kent State University Press
Imprint:   Kent State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9781606352878


ISBN 10:   1606352873
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   30 October 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Karen Roggenkamp is a professor of English at Texas A&M University-Commerce, USA. Author of Narrating the News: New Journalism and Literary Genre in Late Nineteenth-Century American Newspapers and Fiction (The Kent State University Press, 2005), Roggenkamp’s research interests center around periodical culture, the interplay between literature and journalism, and the history of children’s literature. She has served as coeditor of American Periodicals, the scholarly journal of the Research Society for American Periodicals.

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