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Leveraging Media History to Improve Modern Journalism

Newspapers have long documented events both major and mundane, and their archives play a vital role in sustaining — and challenging — collective memory. This round table brings together journalists and archivists to discuss how a comprehensive understanding of a community’s history supports inclusive journalism and promotes civic life. 

Participants:

  • Meg Heckman (moderator) is an Associate Professor of Journalism at Northeastern. She is an award-winning writer, educator and scholar who pursues two distinct research streams: feminist media history and contemporary local news sustainability. She is the author of Political Godmother: Nackey Scripps Loeb and the Newspaper That Shook the Republican Party (University of Nebraska Press, 2020), which examines how the career of newspaper publisher and conservative activist Nackey Scripps Loeb foreshadowed the modern hyperpartisan media ecosystem. She is also involved in several ongoing projects that explore how AI and other computational methods can help surface more inclusive historical narratives.
  • Molly Brown (panelist) is the Reference and Outreach Archivist at Northeastern University’s Archives and Special Collections and serves as co-chair of the Teaching with Primary Sources roundtable for the New England Archivists. The goal of her work in archival reference, outreach, and instruction is to make archives as accessible as possible and to embed all reference and public services with an ethics of care that moves beyond transactional research. 

Reserve tickets here.

Date:
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Time:
2:00pm - 4:00pm
Location:
Centers for Digital Scholarship (SL 360)
Audience:
  Alumni     Faculty     First-Year Students     General Public     Graduate Students     Students  
Categories:
  Talks  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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