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Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
Pt. I | "To Exhibit Truth in an Attractive Form": An Establishment Press Arrives - 1834-1850 | |
1 | Ka Lama: "The Light" Is Brought to Hawai'i | 15 |
2 | The Solemn Responsibility of Dissent | 19 |
3 | The Polynesian: In the Service of America and the Kingdom | 23 |
4 | The English Flag and the English Language | 29 |
5 | God Gives Way to Mammon: The Mahele of 1848 | 32 |
Pt. II | "Fiery Polemic Contests" for the Public's Support - 1850-1887 | |
6 | The Honolulu Times Welcomes the City of Honolulu | 41 |
7 | The Chinese Arrive | 46 |
8 | A Prophet Without Profit: Fornander Topples Judd | 48 |
9 | The Advertiser Enters History | 53 |
10 | A Hawaiian Nationalist Press Is Born | 59 |
11 | "A New Era Has Dawned": Sugar Is King | 63 |
12 | The Politics of Health | 68 |
Pt. III | Nationalists versus the Oligarchy: An Uneven Battle - 1887-1899 | |
13 | A Pan-Pacific Dream | 75 |
14 | Robert Wilcox, "the Napoleon of Printers' Lane" | 84 |
15 | Revolution and the Suppression of Freedom of Speech | 93 |
16 | The Republic Burns Down Chinatown | 105 |
Pt. IV | "Here to Stay": A U.S. Territory - 1900-1941 | |
17 | Annexation and the Pacific Cable | 113 |
18 | The 1909 Strike and the Japanese Language Press | 118 |
19 | Respected Residents Become the Enemy: World War I and the Germans | 126 |
20 | Suppressing the News and Contributing to a Massacre | 131 |
21 | The Three Rs - Reading, 'Riting, and Racism | 140 |
22 | "Reclaiming" Waikiki for the "Aloha Spirit" | 148 |
23 | Getting Away With Murder: The Massie Case | 152 |
24 | Hilo's "Bloody Monday": The Tribune-Herald and the Voice of Labor | 159 |
Pt. V | "Passed for Publication" - 1941-1945 | |
25 | A Wartime Press and the Paradox of Censorship for Freedom | 171 |
26 | AJAs: American Patriots | 184 |
Pt. VI | The March toward Statehood - the 1940s and 1950s | |
27 | "Dear Joe": Lorrin Thurston Writes to Joe - Stalin or Farrington? | 193 |
28 | The Honolulu Record and the Art of Muckraking | 198 |
29 | The Hawaii Seven: Journalists in Jeopardy | 204 |
30 | Ka Leo Reports on the Golden Rule | 212 |
31 | Watch Them Grow: Tourism and Suburban O'ahu | 220 |
32 | Statehood and the Star-Bulletin | 230 |
Pt. VII | The Turbulent 1960s | |
33 | The Business of Newspapers | 241 |
34 | The Popular Columnist | 251 |
35 | Sports and Journalism: "The Social Fabric" | 256 |
36 | Above Ground: The Battle for Diamond Head | 262 |
37 | Underground: The Battle for Hawai'i's Soul | 269 |
38 | Women in the News: From Society to Social Causes | 282 |
Pt. VIII | From Satellite City Halls to a Satellite Universe - 1970-1976 | |
39 | Memories of Maui | 297 |
40 | Corporate Economics and Chain Papers | 310 |
41 | Fighting the Newspapers to a Draw: Frank Fasi and the Dailies | 317 |
42 | The Public Opinion Poll | 326 |
43 | Anger and Wit: The Political Cartoon | 332 |
44 | Hawaiian Sovereignty and a Satellite Universe, 1976 | 338 |
Bibliography | 347 | |
Index | 373 |
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Add Shaping History: The Role of Newspapers in Hawai'i, Just a decade after the first printing press arrived in Honolulu in 1820, American Protestant missionaries produced the first newspaper in the Islands. More than a thousand daily, weekly, or monthly papers in nine different languages have appeared since t, Shaping History: The Role of Newspapers in Hawai'i to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Shaping History: The Role of Newspapers in Hawai'i, Just a decade after the first printing press arrived in Honolulu in 1820, American Protestant missionaries produced the first newspaper in the Islands. More than a thousand daily, weekly, or monthly papers in nine different languages have appeared since t, Shaping History: The Role of Newspapers in Hawai'i to your collection on WonderClub |