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Scholarly Symposium to Highlight 1908 as a Pivotal Year in American Journalism

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Gail F. Baker
Gail F.
Baker
Stephen Banning
Stephen
Banning
Maurine Beasley
Maurine
Beasley
Fred Blevens
Fred
Blevens
Bonnie Brennen
Bonnie
Brennen
Caryl Cooper
Caryl
Cooper
Sandy Davidson
Sandy
Davidson
Lora England
Lora England Wegman
Tracy Everbach
Tracy
Everbach
Scott Fosdick
Scott
Fosdick
Barbara Friedman
Barbara
Friedman
Berkley Hudson
Berkley
Hudson
Janice Hume
Janice
Hume
Hans Ibold
Hans
Ibold
John Merrill
John
Merrill
Dean Mills
Dean
Mills
Earnest Perry
Earnest
Perry
William H. Taft
William H.
Taft
Lee Wilkins
Lee
Wilkins
Betty Winfield
Betty
Winfield

Columbia, Mo. (Feb. 21, 2008) -- A group of nationally renowned scholars and writers will help launch the centennial/dedication celebration by taking a look back at the year 1908 and its role in the history of American journalism.

The symposium, "From Whence We Came to Where We're Going," will be held from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 10, at the Donald W. Reynolds Alumni Center on the MU campus. Sixteen authors of the forthcoming book, Journalism—1908: Birth of a Profession, will lead the symposium. All authors have a Missouri School of Journalism connection, either as former students and faculty or current faculty.

The year 1908 marked not only the founding of the world's first school of journalism at the University of Missouri, but also a turning point of American journalism. New technologies, advertising practices, corporate ownership trends and demand for news set the course for modern journalism, in whatever form.

Interested parties can register to attend the symposium using the official registration form for the 2008 celebration, which will be available online and in print in late April. To request a copy of the registration materials when available, please fill out the contact form at http://journalism.missouri.edu/2008/updates.html. Cost is $25 and includes the scholarly symposium sessions, a luncheon and afternoon refreshments. There will be separate pricing for other centennial/dedication celebration events and meal functions.

The School will celebrate its centennial Sept. 10-12, with the opening of the new Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute, the think tank and research operation for journalism of the 21st century. The three-day celebration will include a variety of social, educational and professional activities designed to celebrate the importance of journalism to our past and to our future. Learn more about the School's history, the event schedule and hotel information at http://journalism.missouri.edu/2008/.

For questions about the symposium, please contact Professor Betty Houchin Winfield by e-mail at or by phone at (573) 882-5639.

Journalism—1908: Birth of a Profession is being published by the University of Missouri Press and will be available for purchase this fall. The contributors to the book will be donating proceeds to a history fund at the School, which will benefit graduate student research, speaker recruitment and more.

Program

(Missouri degrees listed in parentheses.)

12-1:15 p.m.
Lunch and Program: 1908, the Scene
Welcome: Dean Mills (Missouri)
  • Rise of Professionalism in a Very Political Year: Betty Houchin Winfield, Missouri
  • 1908, A Litigious Society, From Whiskey Ads to the Reverend Jellyfish: Sandy Davidson (BA '68, MA '73, JD '82), Missouri

1:30-2:30 p.m.
Roundtable: Institutional Rumblings and Modernization
Leader: Hans Ibold (PhD '08), Indiana
  • Community Journalism: William Taft (BJ '38, MA '39), Missouri
  • Press Clubs Champion Journalism Education: Stephen Banning (MA '93), Bradley
  • Power, Irony and Contradiction: Education and the News Business: Fred Blevens (PhD '95), Florida International
  • Profits versus Pedagogy: Advertising Education's First Battle: Caryl Cooper (MA '93, PhD '96), Alabama
  • Works in Progress, Labor and the Press: Bonnie Brennen (former faculty member), Temple
  • The Year of Thinking Dangerously: What Today's Media Owe to 1908: Lee Wilkins (BJ '71, BA '71), Missouri

2:30-2:45 p.m.
Break

3-4 p.m.
Roundtable: Reporting and Journalism's Extended Family
Leader: Barbara Friedman (MA '99, PhD '04), North Carolina

  • Arts Journalism at the Dawn of New Age: Scott Fosdick (former faculty member), San Jose State
  • The Look of 1908: Visual Design: Lora England Wegman (MA '06), Columbia (Mo.) Tribune
  • Sports Journalism & the New American Character of Energy and Leisure: Tracy Everbach (PhD '04), North Texas
  • Reform and Consume: American Magazines & Social Change: Janice Hume (BJ '81, MA '95, PhD '97), Georgia
  • Good Girls and Bad Women, The Eternal Battle of the Sexes: Maurine Beasley (BJ '58, BA '58), Maryland
  • African Americans and Their Press: Earnest Perry (MA '95, PhD '98), Missouri
  • Foreign Voices Yearning to be Free: Berkley Hudson, Missouri
  • Beginnings of Globalization of Journalism: John Merrill (MA '76), Missouri

4:15-5:15 p.m.
Roundtable: The Future of Journalism Graduate and Undergraduate Education
All participants and the audience are invited to share in the discussion.
Moderator: Gail F. Baker (PhD '91), Nebraska at Omaha

Latest Centennial/Dedication News Available on 2008 Web Site


J2008 Centennial and Dedication The 2008 Web site is the one-stop resource for the Sept. 10-12, 2008, centennial of the Missouri School of Journalism and dedication of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute. Updates are continually added to the event schedule, frequently asked questions, hotel and travel information, reunion planning resources, alumni news, historical timeline and more. Find out more about this extraordinary event at http://journalism.missouri.edu/2008/.
The J-School Arch Stone Lions  
Revised: 21 February 2008. Copyright © 2008 The Curators of the University of Missouri  |  Contact the J-School