Wednesday, July 31, 2024

What We're Reading: July 2024

July was a completely explosive month for news. People on social media are talking about how future historians will specialize in this era because so much has happened this summer so far. Suffice to say there are many spaces this month's edition of What We're Reading won't touch with a ten-foot pole, but we do have some articles that center the work we do as librarians at the Magazines and Newspapers Center. 

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Wait, does America really still employ a ton of news reporters?

Washington Post, July 12, 2024 online/July 21, 2024 in print

Washingtonpost.com gift link

SFPL database link

Print paper image link 

This article is enlightening for its reporting and also its format. First, it uses hard data to survey news industry jobs as a measurement of health of the journalism field. This ultimately tells us that jobs for traditional journalists are not keeping up with the population growth in the USA, and that some of our data gathering approaches are no longer accurate for representing the journalism profession in the year 2024. But secondly, in terms of format, there are essential differences between what you see on the WaPo website, what you get in the print paper, and what you get through library databases that provide the full text of the paper: the data charts. These charts are interactive on the WaPo website and are an integral aspect to an article filed under "Department of Data" and "analyzed" (not written) by Andrew Van Dam. In the print paper, the charts are present, but not interactive. In the library database, they are not included at all. Tricky indeed, but not insurmountable with the help of a Magazines and Newspapers librarian. 

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Saturday, July 27, 2024

The Coast Magazine

 

Take a trip along the Pacific coast by reading The Coast magazine (1937-1942), which is intact as a complete run in the SFPL Magazines and Newspapers Center. You'll get a unique view into an historical snapshot of California and San Francisco, where it was published, first from the depths of the Depression and then into the depths of World War II. This view not only provides photo essays of popular recreation spots in California and insights into the topics at top of mind for the educated class during this time, but one that gives insight into the dominant forms of media of the day.

I would classify The Coast as being cut from the same cloth as the New Yorker, at least in its upstart days: a cultural and intellectual publication containing lots of text, not as many advertisements, studded with witty (and not so witty) cartoons, and contents reporting goings-on, literature releases, news from the film industry, and restaurant listings. Where The Coast leaves off in the 40s, San Francisco magazine picks up in the 50s.

In 1938, the publication ran features on people like Paul Smith from the San Francisco Chronicle, Hearst associate John Francis Neylan from the San Francisco Call, and of Milly Bennett, remarkable "newspaperwoman" that covered--and experienced--more gnarly history than many male journalists. While a librarian from the Magazines and Newspapers Center might get titillated at the regular spotlighting of newspaper people and the activities of the press covering news as it happens, it is no surprise that a print publication from this time period would be concerned with print communication--basically it is the equivalent of an online magazine today making copious references to the internet or cell phones.

Advertisement of people profiled in The Coast, October 1938 issue

As the issues wore on, the magazine ran more stories about radio and film. 

It's also a publication concerned with history and exploration, printing in its first several years a monthly feature called "The Coast Questionnaire" that tested the historical knowledge of its readers (and printed the answers at the back of each issue).

An example of The Coast Questionnaire from the July 1939 issue

 

It went on to run features on a variety of different ethnicities and nationalities in its later days. Articles from 1939 include photo essays on Filipinos in California (September), a Black golf tournament in Los Angeles (October), California's Mexicans (October), California's Japanese (November), and California's Chinese (December). The latter was shot by "a young man who is considered Chinatown's Alfred Stieglitz," Wallace Fong, and researched by historian William Hoy, two men who had worked together on the English-language magazine Chinese Digest; it's refreshing to see that the Coast devoted two columns at the end of the issue to sketch out these men's biographies and projects. It seems as though The Coast gave an early embrace to diversity in the state at a time when mainstream American magazines were very white, serving as a type of proto-Ethnic studies course for its white readers.

Profiles of Wallace Fong, photographer, and William Hoy, historian and writer, in the December 1939 issue of The Coast.

 

No doubt spurred by the globalist worldview sparked by World War II, the 1942 issues contain pieces on "The New American Order in the Orient" by Manuel Buaken (about the fate of the Philippines through World War I (Feb 1942)) and "Holland's Pacific Empire and the War" by N. A. C. Slotemaker de Bruine (also concerned with the strategic position of the "Dutch East Indies" to the Japanese during the war (March 1942)). On a lighter note, features called "India Will Go On" by Gertrude Ann Hunt and "Tastes of Tahiti" by Trader Vic appear in the July 1942 issue, which ended up being the last for the publication, offering a mix of armchair travel and cultural education. 

An issue from three years earlier ran a feature on the Murray Dude Ranch in Victorville, Calif., the only Black dude ranch in the United States at the time (May 1939).

Photo spread of the Murray Dude Ranch in Victorville, Calif., the only Black dude ranch in the United States at the time (May 1939)


Other notable authors to have appeared in the pages of The Coast include Herb Caen (Dec 1937); Toshio Mori (Feb 1939 and April 1941); and William Saroyan, who had pieces appearing regularly throughout the magazine's history

Sometimes poetry also appeared in its pages along with regular photo essays, nonfiction articles, and fiction pieces. Sometimes the poetry appeared with topical effect, i.e. Edward Bosley's March 1939 "Please, Golden Gate International Exposition, Be My Valentine!" Other times the poems were little ditties that brought humor to the pages, i.e. Hugh Nye's rhyme below.

"Prescription for a Hangover" a quatrain by High N. Nye, March 1942

A normal table of contents would list Articles, Photographs, Stories, and Departments (calendar, questionnaire, music, shops, theatre, the films), which remained fairly consistent throughout the years.

This magazine requires advance paging from offsite storage, which can take up to 72 hours. You can request this magazine at the 5th floor page desk at the Main Library or call the Magazines and Newspapers Center to request a librarian page it for you in advance of your visit.


Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Available at the library’s Environmental Center: Emergence Magazine

Editor's note: this guest post is authored by Gregory Hom, Program Manager of the Environmental Center.  

Hi Magazines and Newspapers Center blog readers: I’m the manager of the library’s 5th floor Environmental Center. I’m thankful to be able to do this guest post on a physically beautiful magazine with great content: Emergence Magazine

Emergence has a lovely website you can enjoy on your computer or phone, but they also put out an annual print magazine. Below are the covers for the 2022 and 2023 issues. 2024's issue should arrive at the library relatively soon. 


Volume 4 (2023) of Emergence Magazine: Shifting Landscapes

Volume 3 (2022) of Emergence Magazine: Living with the Unknown


Spectacular photography and visual art, poetry, creative nonfiction pieces, and interviews are all part of the mix. With one issue per year, you’ll want to spend your time with these almost 300-page collections.

Some of the things I read today while preparing for this post: An interview with author Amitav Ghosh looking at issues of colonialism and violence against land and peoples. An interview with scientist Suzanne Simard on her work in forests and the concept of the Mother Tree. Thoughts on economics and ecology with Robin Wall Kimmerer, which will make you want to read her book The Serviceberry, coming out later this year in November. 

These reference volumes are kept in the Environmental Center, either on display or in the Reference Section. I do hope you’ll come by and check them out. The ideas in these 2022 and 2023 volumes are still fresh, relevant, and nurturing.

Saturday, July 6, 2024

What We're Reading: June 2024

At the end of June, following the June 28 presidential debate, we got totally absorbed in reading op-ed pieces calling for Biden to step down as the Democratic presidential candidate. Regardless of our (or your) opinions on the presidential candidates, it is important to know you can get these news articles through SFPL resources and/or with the help of a Magazines and Newspapers Center librarian.

To attempt this yourself, your first stop should be the Libary's Periodical Finder tool, which will tell you which resource to look in for which dates of a publication. If you get stumped, don't hesitate to reach out to us for help. 

The Hill

On June 30, the news site The Hill published an annotated list of outlets that ran pieces calling for Biden to surrender the Democratic nomination ("These major media outlets have called for Biden to drop out," by Nick Robertson). Here, we offer direct links to the pieces through SFPL resources, so whip out your library card and get ready to login. 

The New York Times

The Hill: The Times, which has battled with Biden’s campaign for months over its coverage of the president, said that Biden should step aside to “serve his country,” in a searing editorial on Friday.

In case you hit the NYT paywall through The Hill's link, allow us to remind you that SFPL offers several ways to access the NYT. Here is a direct link to the "searing editorial" in the text-only version via ProQuest.

The New Yorker

The Hill: David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker, evoked Mark Twain to describe Biden’s performance in last week’s debate, remarking on the president’s age.

This piece is an online-only read as of July 6, 2024, which means you should be able to access it openly on the New Yorker website. However, just a note to say that SFPL has several options to access the content of the New Yorker that appears in the print publication, including through Flipster, which completely simulates the experience of reading the print magazine. 

The Economist

The Hill: Britain’s largest current affairs magazine doubled down on its repeated calls for Biden not to run again on Friday. Its own editorial said in stepping down, Biden “would help rescue America from an emergency.”

Like many of the periodicals on this list, SFPL offers several ways to access the content of the Economist. The article referenced by The Hill can be read in full through a database called Gale Academic OneFile. As the Hill makes clear, this isn't the first time the Economist has beat that drum. Check out PressReader, where you can read back issues of the Economist and the new July 6 issue, which is almost exclusively devoted to the topic (see the Leaders section on page 9).

Chicago Tribune

The Hill: The Tribune, the Midwest’s largest newspaper, said last week’s debate should be met with just one word: “Enough.”

Read the text-only version of the article, which in this case is available in ProQuest

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The Hill: The Journal-Constitution’s editorial board also did not mince words. “It’s time for Biden to pass the torch,” the piece is titled.

Georgia's major newspaper is available in a text-only version from several SFPL databases. Here is a direct link to the article via ProQuest.

Other calls

The Hill: Other newspapers weren’t as direct. Both The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal editorial boards said bowing out should be seriously considered by the president, though neither went as far as to explicitly recommend it.

Pop quiz! Try finding the articles from The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post yourself. Use Periodical Finder to search for the name of the newspaper, and then click through to connect to the database. Try searching for a phrase from the article if a search for the title of the article isn't doing the trick. 

Stumped? Leave a comment and we'll get back to you with the direct link.