I’m looking to do research on journalism impacts on Native American storytelling – ie the formation of Tribal press protections in Tribal constitutions. I’m complying this list to help me start looking at sources for my soon to be work. Please feel free to comment with any suggestions for other Native American/Indigenous journalism efforts.
- 100 Questions, 500 Nations: A Guide To Native America
by Native American Journalists Association & Michigan State School Of Journalism - From the Front Lines: Free Press Struggles in Native America limited edition also by Native American Journalists Association
- The Newspaper Indian: Native American identity in the press
- Words have a past: newspapers of boarding schools
- Victoria LaPoe:
- Oil and Water: Media Lessons from Hurricane Katrina and the Deepwater Horizon Disaster
- Indian Country: Telling a Story in a Digital Age
- American Indian Media: The Past, The Present and the Promise of the Digital
- American Indians and the mass media
- Indians illustrated: the image of NA in the press
- Hearts unbroken
- Recovering NA writing in the boarding school press
- Electronic Media and Indigenous Peoples: A Voice of Our Own? Book by Donald R Browne
- The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication
- Book by Valerie Alia
- Songlines to Satellites: Indigenous Communication in Australia, the South Pacific and Canada
- Book by Helen Molnar and Michael Meadows
- Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian Newspapers
- Pou Kōrero: A Journalists’ Guide to Māori and Current AffairsBook by Carol Archie
- Between the Lines: Racism and the New Zealand Media
- Journalism, Politics, and the Dakota Access Pipeline: Standing Rock and the Framing of Injustice by Ellen Moore
- More by author
- Green Screen or Smokescreen? Hollywood’s Messages about Nature and the Environment.
- Framing Disaster: News Media Coverage of Two Native American Environmental Justice Cases authored also by ; Lanthorn, Kylie R for Journal of Communication Inquiry, 2017-07, Vol.41 (3), p.227-249
- Framing Injustice: Media Coverage of Indigenous Resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline
- More by author
- The Tears of Strangers: A Family Memoir Stan Grant
- 10 Rules for Reporting on War Trauma Survivors by Carmen Nobel https://journalistsresource.org/tip-sheets/reporting/10-rules-interviewing-trauma-survivors/
- Hawaii Journalism History
- Native Hawaiians on Coverage of Mauna Kea – Columbia Journalism Institute
- The Hawaiian Newspapers by Esther Mookini
- A Nation Rising: Hawaiian movements for Land, Life and Sovereignty by Noeloni Goodyear-Ka’opua
- Shaping History: the Role of Newspapers in Hawai’i by Helen Geracimos Chapin
- Lessons from Reporting on Hawaii Racially Uneven Foster Care System by Rob Perez
- Multicultural Journalism: a profile of Hawaii’s Newspeople by John Henningham
- Empowering the Peoples‘ Voice as an Act of Self-Determination by Bryan Pollard
- Bolstering Press Freedom in Indian Country by Bryan Pollard
- A Free Press Remains the Exception in Indian Country by Danielle Frost
- American Indian Media Today: Tribes Maintain Majority Ownership as Independent Journalists Seek Growth by Jodi Rave for the Indigenous Media Freedom Alliance
- A Case Study of Two Cherokee Newspapers and Their Fight Against Censorship by Desiree Evans
- Troubling Times for Tribal Media: a free Indigenous Press is Essential for Accountability, Self-Determination by Bryan Pollard for The Investigative Reporters and Editors Journal
- The American Indian Press Association: its history, activities and organization by Don Arthur Christenson
- Native American Newspapers: Selected Vignettes by Sharon Murphy
- Native Print Journalism in the United States: Dreams and Realities by Sharon Murphy in Anthropologica Vol 25 No 1
- A Reporter’s Guide to American Indian Law by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
- United Indians of All Tribes Meets the Press: News Coverage of the 1970 Occupation of Fort Lawton by Karen Smith
- More than News: Indigenous Media Empowers Native Voices and Communities by Bryan Pollard
- The State of Native Media by Patty Talahongva
- The Red Press Initiative research conducted by the Native American Journalist Association
- American Indian Media Today by Jodi Rave
- Future of Local News Commission Act of 2020: https://www.schatz.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Future%20of%20Local%20News%20Commission%20Act%20FINAL.pdf
- Chibuwe, Albert, Salawu, Abioudun. Training for English language or indigenous language media journalism: A decolonial critique of Zimbabwean journalism and media training institutions’ training practices. Journal of African media studies. 2020;12(2):137-156. doi:10.1386/jams_00016_1
- The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication by Valeria Alia
- Journalism in Indian Country: Story Telling That Makes Sense by Sharon Murphy
- Charting a theoretical framework for examining Indigenous journalism culture by Folker Hanusch
- Nation-building, not “Resistance Radio” by Shayna Plaut
- Indigenous Political Journalism in the Norwegian and Swedish Public Service Broadcasters by Eli Skogerbø ; Josefsen, Eva ; Fjellström, Anna-MariaJournalism Studies, 2019-05-19, Vol.20 (7), p.991-1008
- Indigenous cultural values and journalism in the Asia-Pacific region: a brief history of Māori journalism by Folker Hanusch
- We interrupt this program: Indigenous media tactics in in Canadian culture by Miranda J. Brady and John M. H. Kelly
- The fourth eye : Māori media in Aotearoa New Zealand edited by Brendan Hokowhitu and Vijay Devadas
- Reforming fictions : Native, African, and Jewish American women’s literature and Journalism in the Progressive Era by Carol J. Batker
- An Indian Perspective – Native American Journalism: An Overview by Richard LaCourse
- Native American press in Wisconsin and the nation : proceedings of the Conference on the Native American Press in Wisconsin and the Nation, April 22-23, 1982 by the Conference on the Native American Press in Wisconsin and the Nation
- “Her Rightful Place In The New Scheme Of Things”: Native American Women’S Journalism In The Dawes Era by Carol J Batker Reforming Fictions, 2015, p.15-36 chapter excerpt
- Outsiders in 19th-century press history : multicultural perspectives edited by Frankie Hutton and Barbara Straus Reed
- Journalism across cultures edited by Fritz Cropp, Cynthia Frisby, Dean Mills
- Native Americans in the news : images of Indians in the twentieth century press by Mary Ann Weston
- Connecting Native American Students to Journalism by Bridget Gutierrez
- How Journalists Characterize Health Inequalities and Redefine Solutions for Native American Audiences by Hinnant, Amanda ; Subramanian, Roma ; Ashley, Rokeshia Renné ; Perreault, Mimi ; Young, Rachel ; Thomas, Ryan J in Health Communication, 2019-03-21, Vol.34 (4), p.383-391
- A struggle: will tribal journalists be free? (Native American journalism) by Cleghorn, Reese in American journalism review, 1996-12-01, Vol.18 (10), p.4
- The new storytellers: Native Americans find difficulties mixing journalism with tribal traditions. (Special Report: Diversity in the Newsroom) by Gassaway, Bob M for The Quill (Chicago), 1991-05-01, Vol.79 (4), p.32
- Tsalagi Tsulehisanvhi: Uncovering Cherokee Language Articles from the Cherokee Phoenix Newspaper, 1828–1834 by Owl, Constance
- Native American Journalists: Finding a Pipeline into Journalism by Reaves, Shiela Newspaper Research Journal, 1995-09, Vol.16 (4), p.57-73
- An era of free Native American press: Tim Giago and the “Lakota Times”, “Indian Country Today”, land the “Lakota Journal”, 1981–2003 by Whitehead, Louis George
- Pictures of our Nobler Selves by Mark Trahant
- The Princess and the Squaw: The Construction of Native American Women in the Pictorial Press by Coward, John M for American journalism, 2014, Vol.31 (1), p.71-99
- The role of Native American print and online media in the ‘era of big stories’: A comparative case study of Native American outlets’ coverage of the Red Lake shootings by Daniels, George L for Journalism, 2006-08, Vol.7 (3), p.321-342
- The captive Native American press by Collins, Mary for Washington journalism review (1983), 1990-12-01, Vol.12 (10), p.15
- Neglected Pioneers: 19th Century Native American Newspapers by Murphy, Sharon for Journalism History, 1977-10-01, Vol.4 (3), p.79-100
- Exploring Public Service Journalism: Digitally Native News Nonprofits and Engagement by Ferrucci, Patrick for Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 2017-03, Vol.94 (1), p.355-370
- Changing Faces: Native Journalists Break through Barriers in New Media by Avila Hernandez, Juan A for Tribal college, 2008-01-01
- Black Ink and the New Red Power: Native American Newspapers and Tribal Sovereignty by Loew, Patty ; Mella, Kelly for Journalism & Mass Communication Monographs, 2005-09, Vol.7 (3), p.99-142
- Meet the New Players: A Study of Digital Native Journalists and Journalistic Professionalism by Wu, Lu
- Newspapers as a Form of Settler Colonialism: An Examination of the Dakota Access Pipeline Protest and American Indian Representation in Indigenous, State, and National News by Beckermann, Kay Marie
- Learning to see what they can’t: Decolonizing perspectives on indigenous education in the racial context of rural Nova Scotia by J. Tompkins ISSN: 0024-9033 , 1916-0666 McGill Journal of Education. , 2002, Vol.37(3), p.405
- Native Americans in the News: Images of Indians in the Twentieth Century Press by Weston, Mary A
- The Diversity Style Guide: A Journalist’s Handbook by Kanigel, Rachele
- The making and muting of an indigenous media activist: Imagination and ideology in Charles Round Low Cloud’s Indian News by ARNDT, GRANT for American ethnologist, 2010-08, Vol.37 (3), p.499-510
- Indian Journalism began with Cherokees: Phoenix–Advocate by Agent, Dan for the Cherokee phoenix (Tahlequah, Okla. : 2002), 1996-05-31, Vol.XX (5)