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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nord, David Paul
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED205954
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Table of Contents:
  • Working-Class Readers: Using Labor Statistics to Study Newspaper Readership in the Late Nineteenth Century. Nord, David Paul Audiences Employment Statistics Laborers Media Research Newspapers Reading Interests Social History Statistical Data United States History Working Class Library historians and historians of literacy have been more creative than journalism historians in using individual-level historical data such as deeds, wills, depositions, surveys, and census figures to study reading behaviors of the past. For example, the series of family cost of living surveys conducted in the United States by state and federal bureaus of labor statistics in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries can be of great use to journalism historians. These studies of working class family budgets include detailed information on family makeup, income, and expenditures--including expenditures on reading materials. A computer analysis of a sample of cotton textile worker budgets taken from an 1889-90 survey found that expenditures for newspapers were associated in interesting ways with family income, region of residence, ethnicity, and family life cycle. The analysis also found some evidence that working class families read newspapers more for diversion or amusement than for educational or self-improvement purposes. (FL)