John Maxwell Hamilton
Hopkins P. Breazeale Professor of Journalism, LSU Manship School of Mass Communication | Global Scholar, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C.
241 Hodges Hall | 225-578-2002 | [email protected] | Website: https://faculty.lsu.edu/johnhamilton | Follow @Age_of_Lies for a discussion of government propaganda.
Biography
Jack Hamilton, a long-time journalist, author, and public servant, is the Hopkins P. Breazeale Professor in LSU’s Manship School of Mass Communication. He has an appointment as a global fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and is a columnist for RealClearPolitics in Washington, D.C.
As a journalist, Hamilton reported at home and abroad for the Milwaukee Journal, the Christian Science Monitor, and ABC radio. He was a longtime commentator for MarketPlace, broadcast nationally by Public Radio International. His work has appeared in the New York Times, The Washington Post, Foreign Affairs, and The Nation, among other publications.
In government, Hamilton oversaw nuclear non-proliferation issues for the House Foreign Affairs Committee, served in the State Department during the Carter administration as an advisor to head of the US foreign aid program in Asia, and managed a World Bank program to educate Americans about economic development. He served in Vietnam as a Marine Corps platoon commander and in Okinawa as a reconnaissance company commander.
In his twenty years as an LSU administrator, Hamilton was founding dean of the Manship School and executive vice-chancellor and provost. Throughout that time he enthusiastically taught students and guided graduate students' research, a pursuit to which he remains dedicated as a journalism professor.
While Hamilton was dean of the Manship School, it became a free-standing college-level unit. It added a one-of-a-kind doctoral degree devoted to media and public affairs, launched the Reilly Center for Media & Public Affairs and a related opinion research facility, and assumed oversight of Student Media, which consists of a daily newspaper, magazine, and television and radio stations. The number of majors more than doubled as did the size of the faculty and staff; the school’s endowment more than sextupled. The school, which had the highest admission standards on campus, was named a priority program at LSU – the only college-level unit so designated.
Asked to serve as executive vice-chancellor during a period of economic turmoil, Hamilton led a reorganization that merged colleges, schools, and departments to save money and stabilize vulnerable academic programs. He set in motion a distance learning initiative and created external support groups to fight for state funding and administrative autonomies.
Hamilton received the Freedom Forum’s Administrator of the Year Award in 2003. Other honors include two Green Eyeshade Excellence in Journalism Awards, the By-Line Award from Marquette University, and the MLK Day diversity award from LSU. In 2023, Hamilton won the Donald L. Shaw Senior Scholar Award for excellence in journalism history, given by the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication’s History Division, and the Sidney Kobre Award for Lifetime Achievement in Journalism History, the highest honor of the American Journalism History Association. He has received funding from the Carnegie and Ford Foundations, among others. In 2002 he was a Shorenstein fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. He has served twice as a Pulitzer Prize jurist. He is a member of the Metropolitan Club of Washington.
Hamilton serves on the boards of the International Center for Journalists, of which he is treasurer, and was formerly on the board of Lamar Corporation, listed on Nasdaq as the largest outdoor advertising company in the US as measured by number of displays. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and serves on the Historical Advisory Board of the US World War One Centennial Commission.
In the course of his career, Hamilton has had assignments in more than 50 countries. In addition to covering foreign news, Hamilton has written extensively on foreign news gathering and sought to improve it. In the mid-1980s he created and directed a Society of Professional Journalist’s project to develop techniques for local reporting of foreign news, especially on relations with developing countries. He later contributed to a similar project for the American Society of Newspaper Editors. In the 1980s, the National Journal said Hamilton has shaped public opinion about the complexity of US -Third World relations “more than any other single journalist.”
Hamilton’s most recent book is The French 75. His previous book, published in 2020, was Manipulating the Masses: Woodrow Wilson and the Birth of American Propaganda. Both that book and Journalism’s Roving Eye: A History of American News gathering Abroad won the Goldsmith Prize from the Shorenstein Center on Press, Politics & Public Policy, and the Book of the Year Award from the American Journalism Historians Association.
Hamilton’s other books are Main Street America and the Third World; Entangling Alliances: How the Third World Shapes Our Lives; Edgar Snow: A Biography; Hold the Press: The Inside Story on Newspapers (with George Krimsky); and Casanova Was a Book Lover: And Other Naked Truths and Provocative Curiosities about the Writing, Selling, and Reading of Books. He is editor of the LSU Press book series “From Our Correspondent.”
Hamilton earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in journalism from Marquette and Boston Universities respectively, and a doctorate in American Civilization from George Washington University.
Selected Publications
Articles:
Hamilton, "Heroes for Hitmen," Real Clear Politics, August 8, 2024.
Hamilton, "Words, Words, Words," Real Clear Politics, August 4, 2024.
Hamilton, "A Patagonian Christmas Story," Callaway Climate Insights, December 19, 2023.
Lindsay McCluskey, Hamilton, Amy Reynolds: "When Propaganda Became a Dirty Word," Journalism History, 49:2 (June 2023).
Hamilton and Heidi Tworek, "Not All the News That's Fit to Print: The New York Times as a Research Tool," Political Communication, 40:5 (2023).
Hamilton, J. M. (2023). "American Midnight: The Great War, A Violent Peace, and Democracy's Forgotten Crisis," American Purpose.
Hamilton, "Columnists and Calumny," American Purpose, March 18, 2022.
Finn, P. and Hamilton, J. M. (2022). Herbert Corey’s Great War: A Memoir of World War I by the American Reporter Who Saw It All.
Hamilton, J. M., and Kosar, K. R. (2022). "Why Biden is in Danger of Replicating Woodrow Wilson’s Propaganda Machine," Politico History Dept.
Henderson, M., & Hamilton, J. M. (2020). Public Service Propaganda? How Americans Evaluate Political Advocacy by Executive Agencies, Social Science Quarterly.
McCune, M. M., & Hamilton, J. M. (2017). 'My object is to be of service to you’: Carl Ackerman and the Wilson administration during World War I, Intelligence and National Security.
Hamilton, J. M., & Tworek, H. (2017). The Natural History of the News: An Epigenetic Study, Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism.
Hamilton, J. M. (2015). The Gospel of Book Theft, The Sewanee Review.
Hamilton, J. M., Lawrence, R., & Pfetzer, E. (2014). The Evolution of an Expatriate Newspaper: As seen through editorial policies of the Paris Herald, Journalism Studies.
Hamilton, J. M. (2014). Journalism Education: The View from the Provost’s Office, Journalism & Mass Communication Educator.
Cozma, R., Lawrence, R., & Hamilton, J. M. (2012). Sourcing in Foreign Correspondence: A Study in the Evolution of Norms and Routines, Newspaper Research Journal.
Hamilton, J. M., & Lawrence, R. (2010). Bridging Past and Future: Using History and Practice to Inform Social Science Study of Foreign Newsgathering, Journalism Studies, 11:5 (October).
Hamilton, J., Lawrence, R., & Cozma, R. (2010). The Paradox of Respectability: The Limits of Indexing and Harrison Salisbury’s Coverage of the Vietnam War, The International Journal of Press/Politics, January.
Cozma, R., & Hamilton, J. (2009). Film Portrayals of Foreign Correspondents: A Content Analysis of Movies before WWII and after Vietnam, Journalism Studies, August.
Cole, J., & Hamilton, J. (2008). Another Test of the News: American Partisan Press Coverage of the French Revolution, Journalism History, Spring.
Cole, J., & Hamilton, J. (2008). The History of a Surviving Species: Defining Eras in the Evolution of Foreign Correspondence, Journalism Studies, October 2008.
Cole, J., & Hamilton, J. (2007). A Natural History of Foreign Correspondence: A Study of the Chicago Daily News, 1900-1921, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 84:1, Spring.
Hamilton, J., Coleman, R., Grable, B. & Cole, J. (2006). An Enabling Environment: A Reconsideration of the Press and the Spanish-American War, Journalism Studies, February.
Erickson, E., & Hamilton, J. (2006). Foreign Reporting Enhanced by Parachute Journalism, Journalism Studies, February.
Rowley, K., & Hamilton, J. (2005). A Missing Link in the History of American War Correspondents: James Bradford and the Time Piece of St. Francisville, Louisiana, American Journalism, Fall.
Broussard, J., & Hamilton, J. (2005). Covering a Two-Front War: African-American Foreign Correspondents During World War II, American Journalism, Summer.
Wu, H.D., & Hamilton, J. (2005). U.S. Foreign Correspondents: Changes and Continuity at the Turn of the Century, Gazette, The International Journal for Communication Studies, February.
Hamilton, J., & Jenner, E. (2004). Redefining Foreign Correspondence, Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, August.
Hamilton, J. M., & Jenner, E., The New Foreign Correspondence, Foreign Affairs, Sept.-Oct. 2003.
Reports:
Folkerts, J., Hamilton, J. M., & Lemann, N. (2013). Educating Journalists: A New Plea for the University Tradition, Columbia University School of Journalism and Carnegie Corporation.
Hamilton, J. M. & Kosar, K. R. (2016). Government Information and Propaganda: How to Draw a Line? R. Street Policy Study No. 73.
Books:
Corey, H., Finn, P., & Hamilton, J. M. (2022). Herbert Corey’s Great War : a memoir of World War I, by the American reporter who saw it all. Louisiana State University Press.
Hamilton, J. M. (2020). Manipulating the Masses: Woodrow Wilson and the Birth of American Propaganda, Louisiana State University Press.
Hamilton, J. M., & Mann, R. (2012). Edited, annotated, and introduction, Ray Stannard Baker, A Journalist’s Diplomatic Mission: Ray Stannard Baker’s World War I Diary. Louisiana State University Press.*
Curley, T., & Hamilton, J. M. (2012). Introduction, Edward Kennedy, Ed. Kennedy’s War: V-E Day, Censorship, and the Associated Press. Louisiana State University Press.*
Fleming, A. M., & Hamilton, J. M. (2009). Introduction, The Crimean War: As Seen by Those Who Reported It. Louisiana State University Press.*
Hamilton, J. M. (2009). Journalism’s Roving Eye: A History of American Newsgathering Abroad. Louisiana State University Press.
Cole, J., & Hamilton, J.M., edited, annotated, and introduction, Edward Price Bell. (2007). Journalism of the Highest Realm: The Memoir of Edward Price Bell, Pioneering Foreign Correspondent for the Chicago Daily News. Louisiana State University Press.*
Hamilton, J. M. Introduction, Evelyn Waugh, Waugh in Abyssinia (2007), Louisiana State University Press.*
Hamilton, J. M. (2000). Casanova Was a Book Lover: And Other Naked Truths and Provocative Curiosities about the Writing, the Selling, and the Reading of Books. Louisiana State University Press; (2001) Penguin.
Hamilton, J. M., & Krimsky, G.A. (1996). Hold the Press: The Inside Story on Newspapers. Louisiana State University Press.
Hamilton, J. M. (1990). Entangling Alliances: How the Third World Shapes Our Lives. Seven Locks Press.
Hamilton, J. M. (1988). Edgar Snow: A Biography. Indiana University Press.
Hamilton, J. M. (1986). Main Street America and the Third World. Seven Locks Press.
*Published in series, "From Our Own Correspondent."
Podcasts:
The Enduring Legacy of the French 75 Cocktail : (https://www.marketplace.org/2024/04/10/the-enduring-legacy-of-the-french-75-cocktail/) Marketplace, April 2024