Monthly Archives: April 2024

AEJMC HISTORY DIVISION ANNOUNCES BOOK AWARD WINNER: Ken J. Ward

The History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) has selected Ken J. Ward as winner of its award honoring the best journalism and mass communication history book published in 2023. Ward is the author of Last Paper Standing: A Century of Competition Between the Denver Post and Rocky Mountain News (University of Colorado Press).

Ken J. Ward

The committee also recognizes Josh Shepperd as runner-up for this year’s Book Award. He is author of Shadow of the New Deal: The Victory of Public Broadcasting (University of Illinois Press).

A panel of three distinguished media historians chose Last Paper Standing from a diverse field of entries. Judges cited Ward’s engaging narrative, the depth of his scholarship, and the book’s relevance for contemporary media issues.

One judge praised Ward’s book as an example of “long-form historical writing deeply grounded in primary sources.” The book tells the story of the fierce competition between the two Denver newspapers, which paralleled the trajectory of the American newspaper industry and culminated in the closure of the Rocky Mountain News in 2009.

The judge added that Ward’s book “is significant to both media historians and contemporary journalism critics. His exploration of the state of the Denver newspapers from the nineteenth through the twentieth centuries explains so many of the economic factors that led to the ills of the news industry today.”

Judges also praised Shepperd’s Shadow of the New Deal for its effective use of primary sources and its contribution to the media history literature. Reading this scholarship, one judge said, brought “a sense of discovery.”

“Shepperd’s book is a fresh, deeply researched entry to the canon,” the judge added. “It is rich in archival sources and nuanced in its interpretation of the birth and evolution of public broadcasting.” Another judge said the book will serve as a valuable resource for scholars studying the history of broadcasting in this country.”

Ward is assistant professor of multimedia journalism at Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, Kansas, and a former reporter for the McPherson Sentinel. His research has appeared in Journalism History, the Journal of Media Law and Ethics, and the Journal of Media Ethics, and he has received the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication’s Warren Price Award and the American Journalism Historians Association’s Robert Lance Memorial Award.

Shepperd is an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder and director of the Sound Submissions Project at the Library of Congress.

Ward will receive a plaque and cash prize. Both honorees will be recognized during the division’s awards gala, Aug. 7, at the 2024 AEJMC National Convention in Philadelphia. Ward’s book will be discussed in future episodes of the Journalism History podcast.  

AEJMC History Division announces Dr. Linda Lumsden as winner of 2024 Donald L. Shaw Senior Scholar Award

The History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication will honor Dr. Linda Lumsden as the Donald L. Shaw Senior Scholar during the Division’s Awards Gala. The longtime journalist, editor, public scholar, and author of five books, including Social Justice Journalism: Social Movement Media from Abolition to #womensmarch (New York: Peter Lang, 2019), retired in 2021 after teaching for more than two decades at the Western Kentucky School of Journalism & Broadcasting and University of Arizona School of Journalism.

Established in 2020, the award honors a scholar who has a record of excellence in media history that has spanned a minimum of 15 years, including division membership. It is named in honor of the pioneering journalism theoretician, distinguished journalism historian and former head of the History Division, who taught for almost half of a century at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Hussman School of Journalism and Media. 

“We were gratified by the quality of the nominees for this prestigious award, which is now in its fifth year,” one judge said. “Linda Lumsden is an incredibly accomplished scholar and richly deserving of this award. She has produced outstanding work in multiple areas of journalism history—the radical press, women’s-rights journalism, and social-justice journalism—and in doing so has shown the interconnectedness of these important areas. Her years of service to the profession and mentorship of junior colleagues have contributed greatly to the continuing robustness of the History Division.”

Over the course of her 12-year journalistic career, Dr. Lumsden served as a reporter and editor on newspapers in New York and Connecticut.

Dr. Lumsden, who received her Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1995, is the author of five books and countless journal articles. During her illustrious career, Dr. Lumsden served as the J. William Fulbright Core Scholar at National University of Malaysia in 2012- 2013 and was honored with numerous awards, including AEJMC’s 2017 Best Faculty Paper and a three-time winner of the American Journalism Historian Association’s Maurine Beasley Award for Outstanding Paper in Women’s History in 2005, 2006, 2007, respectively, and was a runner-up in 2008.

“So much of what we know about the radical press and the suffrage press we owe to Linda Lumsden,” another judge added. “Her seminal work in both areas is cited and taught widely. She continues to blaze new paths with her more recent work on social justice journalism. What’s more, she has been a high-impact member of AEJMC and its History Division since the 1990s, sharing her expertise and big heart through mentoring junior scholars and robust service to our associational life. I’m thrilled that this year’s winner of the Shaw Award is Linda Lumsden.”

Added Professor Carol B. Schwalbe, the Director of the University of Arizona’s School of Journalism, who nominated Lumsden for the prestigious award: “The thread through Linda’s scholarship has been an exploration of how disempowered groups find voice through journalism in their struggles for social justice. Her work has significantly contributed to the history of social justice journalism, the radical press, the black press, the suffrage press, and women reporters since she first won top AEJMC paper prizes as a part-time, nondegree-seeking graduate student in 1991 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.”

Despite her record of tremendous accomplishments and honors, Dr. Lumsden noted that news of the award was “a true gift to learn from out of the blue that my work meant something, and that I contributed in some small way to journalism history.”

“I am surprised and thrilled to have my name associated with these heroes of journalism history,” Dr. Lumsden noted. “Don Shaw taught me historical research methods at UNC-Chapel Hill back in 1991, and I have revered the inspirational Maurine Beasley, the first recipient of this award, as the founding mother of women’s journalism history since my graduate school days.

It is also rewarding for me to see the tremendous growth in recent years in research on the alternative press and social justice journalism, as reflected in History Division papers, journal articles and awards. No one could ask for a finer end to their career than this recognition that I have played a small role in that progress.”

Along the way, Dr. Lumsden mentored countless undergraduate and graduate students and peer scholars, who have gone on to illustrious careers of their own, and they regularly cite the influence of her contributions on their lives.

“Linda’s work has affected both my scholarship and my teaching. At an AJHA convention in Birmingham, Alabama, she gave a presentation on political cartoons in radical periodicals. Her analysis was brilliant and I was enthralled,” University of Louisville Professor John P. Ferré recalled. “In fact, I began to connect the dots between her research on visual rhetoric in the radical press and my study of religious media. That inspiration led to a chapter I published a few years later: “Evangelical Television Criticism through a Half Century of Christianity Today Cartoons.” Fast forward to 2020. I was searching for reading material for my 500-level communication ethics course that would satisfy my students’ growing interest in issues of social justice, which burgeoned after Louisville police shot and killed Breonna Taylor just seven miles from campus, as well as my desire for media analysis that takes history seriously to compensate for the fact that our majors and graduate students have no required media history course. Linda’s latest book, Social Justice Journalism: Social Movement Media from Abolition to #womensmarch, fit the bill perfectly.”

Dr. Lumsden will receive a plaque and monetary award during the division’s Awards Gala in conjunction with the AEJMC annual meeting.