Teri Finneman, an associate professor at the University of Kansas, William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communication, is the winner of History Division’s Exceptional Service Award.
This important award is given by the division’s chair and vice chair for exceptional service to the History Division. Finneman was the Chair of the History Division in 2020, and is currently is the Publications Chair.
Edgar Simpson of the University of Southern Mississippi is the winner of the 2022 Diversity in Media History Research Award.
The award – presented by the History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) – recognizes the outstanding paper in journalism or mass communication history that addresses issues of inclusion and the study of historically marginalized groups or topics. The award winner is selected from research submitted for the annual conference competition.
Simpson won for the paper, “Spinning Hate: Mississippi’s post-Brown PR Offensive and the Secret Campaign Against “Agitators, 1956-1960.”
While all of the papers that were considered offer worthwhile insights into issues of gender, identity, and race representation in media, this particular paper does excellent work examining an important moment in media history that continues to have implications for current moment; as the author(s) state: “These incidents, the study argues, are not just quaint echoes of a dead past, but rather a rare window into what manipulating the public sphere looks like.”
Through an examination of public relations practices in the state of Mississippi following Brown vs. Board of Education, this scholarship advances existing scholarship on the Civil Rights Movement, the press, and public relations, “by examining the extraordinary efforts of the Sovereignty Commission to maintain whiteness as policy by manipulating the public sphere through both accepted public relations practices and the more nefarious art of coercion.”
The study relies on the commission’s archives, opened to the public in 1998 after a 21-year Freedom of Information Act suit, along with other relevant historical resources, to examine the work of this commission and, more importantly, how this commission’s agenda sought nothing less than to manipulate the public sphere (alá Habermas) to gain support for its agenda of ongoing segregationist practices and policies.
This paper raises important and timely questions about the importance of information sourcing and verification and the need for journalists to ask tough questions of public officials and organizations and the information they readily provide.
Simpson will receive a plaque and cash prize for their award-winning research. He will also be recognized during the History Division’s business meeting on July 28th virtually.
The History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) is announcing that Edgar Simpson of the University of Southern Mississippi, has won this year’s Top Faculty Paper Award.
He will receive a plaque and a $100 cash prize for her paper, “Spinning hate: Mississippi’s post-Brown PR offensive and the secret campaign against ‘agitators,’ 1956-1960.”
The second-place faculty paper award goes to Perry Parks of Michigan State University for “Often it is disastrous to take a single note”: Memory and Materiality in a Century of Journalism Textbooks.”
Third place faculty paper goes to Yu-li Chang Zacher of Bethel University for “First Chinese American Newspaperwoman: Mamie Louise Leung at Los Angeles Record, 1926-1929″
In the student paper competition, the top award winner is Anna Lindner of the Wayne State University for her paper “Race and Social Status: A Content Analysis of the Colonial Cuban Newspaper Gaceta de la Habana, 1849.” She will receive a plaque and a $100 cash prize.
The second place student award goes to Diflin Mulupi of the University of Mayland College Park for “Eugenic Sterilization in the New York Times Between 1905-1910 and 1925-1929.”
Third place was won by Grayce Limpert of the Minnesota State University Mankato for “Framing My Lai in Print News: Archival Case Study of The My Lai Massacre Coverage in Newspapers.”
The History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) has selected Kathy Roberts Forde, Katherine A. Foss, Melita M. Garza, and Will Mari as winners of the 2022 Jinx C. Broussard Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Media History.
The award acknowledges original, creative practices that journalism educators and media historians use in their classrooms to teach media history and seeks to share those techniques with other instructors. Ideas and practices focused on diversity, collaboration, community, and justice receive special attention in the selection process. The award is in its fourth year.