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Lincoln Mediated : The President and the Press Through Nineteenth-Century Media - David W. Bulla

Lincoln Mediated

The President and the Press Through Nineteenth-Century Media

By: David W. Bulla

Paperback | 18 December 2020 | Edition Number 1

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Lincoln Mediated provides new information about a historical figure everyone thinks they know. It describes how Abraham Lincoln worked with the press throughout his political career, beginning with his service in Congress in the late 1840s, and detailing how his ties to newspapers in Illinois, New York, and Washington played a central role in the success of his presidency. Gregory A. Borchard and David W. Bulla study how Lincoln used the press to deliver his written and spoken messages, how editors reacted to the president, and how Lincoln responded to their criticism. Reviewing his public persona through the lens of international media and visually based sources, a fascinating profile emerges.

The authors cite the papers of Lincoln, the letters of influential figures, and content from leading newspapers. The book also features nineteenth-century illustrations and photographs. Lincoln Mediated ties the president''s story directly to the press, illuminating his role as a writer and as a participant in making the news. Lincoln''s legacy cannot be understood without understanding the role the press played in helping shape how he was viewed. As the authors show, Lincoln was a man, not just a political figure. Lincoln Mediated is a worthy addition to Transaction''s Journalism series.

Industry Reviews

-Offers(s) new insights on the presidency of Abraham Lincoln through the lens of contemporaneous media. . . . Useful to schloars of war reporting, the partisan press, political campaigning, and photography as it is to those interested in Lincoln. . . . The clear and compelling writing style makes the work accessible to a public audience.-

--Erika K. Pribanic-Smith, Journalism History

-The book . . . deserves accolades for reviewing commentary on Lincoln in niche publications of the era, like African American newspapers, religious newspapers, and foreign language newspapers, and in the foreign press, chiefly Canadian and British newspapers. There are several excellent historians today who focus their research on Lincoln and the Civil War era . . . But none likely bring more expertise to this area than Borchard and Bulla, who have written three other books and a half-dozen articles on this subject. Their latest book is rich with primary sources in addition to the usual newspaper accounts from the era. Any scholar who focuses on 19th-century history would do well to read this book.-

--Joe Mirando, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly

-Prolifically resourced, using newspapers and magazines. . . . A concise treatment of the subject and well cited, making it a workable supplemental text for graduates and undergraduates.-

--Stephen Banning, American Journalism

-We have never heard the voice of Abraham Lincoln but we can hear his voice, as did journalists of his era at the memorial service after Gettysburg, and we can feel Lincoln's deep concern as he sought a successful general, before he picked U.S. Grant, to take on Robert E. Lee. We know Lincoln intimately as a member of our first families of history because journalists relayed his deceptively--complex story to us directly at the time, and since then, via historians. This book is about those important journalistic witnesses. Lincoln's story is also their story . . . and ours.-

--Donald L. Shaw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


"Offers(s) new insights on the presidency of Abraham Lincoln through the lens of contemporaneous media. . . . Useful to schloars of war reporting, the partisan press, political campaigning, and photography as it is to those interested in Lincoln. . . . The clear and compelling writing style makes the work accessible to a public audience."

--Erika K. Pribanic-Smith, Journalism History

"The book . . . deserves accolades for reviewing commentary on Lincoln in niche publications of the era, like African American newspapers, religious newspapers, and foreign language newspapers, and in the foreign press, chiefly Canadian and British newspapers. There are several excellent historians today who focus their research on Lincoln and the Civil War era . . . But none likely bring more expertise to this area than Borchard and Bulla, who have written three other books and a half-dozen articles on this subject. Their latest book is rich with primary sources in addition to the usual newspaper accounts from the era. Any scholar who focuses on 19th-century history would do well to read this book."

--Joe Mirando, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly

"Prolifically resourced, using newspapers and magazines. . . . A concise treatment of the subject and well cited, making it a workable supplemental text for graduates and undergraduates."

--Stephen Banning, American Journalism

"We have never heard the voice of Abraham Lincoln but we can hear his voice, as did journalists of his era at the memorial service after Gettysburg, and we can feel Lincoln's deep concern as he sought a successful general, before he picked U.S. Grant, to take on Robert E. Lee. We know Lincoln intimately as a member of our first families of history because journalists relayed his deceptively--complex story to us directly at the time, and since then, via historians. This book is about those important journalistic witnesses. Lincoln's story is also their story . . . and ours."

--Donald L. Shaw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


"Offers(s) new insights on the presidency of Abraham Lincoln through the lens of contemporaneous media. . . . Useful to schloars of war reporting, the partisan press, political campaigning, and photography as it is to those interested in Lincoln. . . . The clear and compelling writing style makes the work accessible to a public audience."

--Erika K. Pribanic-Smith, Journalism History

"The book . . . deserves accolades for reviewing commentary on Lincoln in niche publications of the era, like African American newspapers, religious newspapers, and foreign language newspapers, and in the foreign press, chiefly Canadian and British newspapers. There are several excellent historians today who focus their research on Lincoln and the Civil War era . . . But none likely bring more expertise to this area than Borchard and Bulla, who have written three other books and a half-dozen articles on this subject. Their latest book is rich with primary sources in addition to the usual newspaper accounts from the era. Any scholar who focuses on 19th-century history would do well to read this book."

--Joe Mirando, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly

"Prolifically resourced, using newspapers and magazines. . . . A concise treatment of the subject and well cited, making it a workable supplemental text for graduates and undergraduates."

--Stephen Banning, American Journalism

"We have never heard the voice of Abraham Lincoln but we can hear his voice, as did journalists of his era at the memorial service after Gettysburg, and we can feel Lincoln's deep concern as he sought a successful general, before he picked U.S. Grant, to take on Robert E. Lee. We know Lincoln intimately as a member of our first families of history because journalists relayed his deceptively--complex story to us directly at the time, and since then, via historians. This book is about those important journalistic witnesses. Lincoln's story is also their story . . . and ours."

--Donald L. Shaw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


"Prolifically resourced, using newspapers and magazines. . . . A concise treatment of the subject and well cited, making it a workable supplemental text for graduates and undergraduates."

--Stephen Banning, American Journalism


"We have never heard the voice of Abraham Lincoln but we can hear his voice, as did journalists of his era at the memorial service after Gettysburg, and we can feel Lincoln's deep concern as he sought a successful general, before he picked U.S. Grant, to take on Robert E. Lee. We know Lincoln intimately as a member of our first families of history because journalists relayed his deceptively--complex story to us directly at the time, and since then, via historians. This book is about those important journalistic witnesses. Lincoln's story is also their story . . . and ours."

--Donald L. Shaw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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