Profile picture of Gretchen Soderlund

Gretchen Soderlund

Associate Professor of Media History
Director, Media Studies Program
Phone: 541-346-8922
Office: 309A Allen Hall
City: Eugene

Biography

Gretchen Soderlund earned her PhD in Communications Research from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she specialized in journalism history. She is an expert on the history of media coverage of sex trafficking. Soderlund's research examines the history of scandal in investigative reporting, media sensationalism, moral reform movements and the press, and the rise of journalistic objectivity. Recently she has written about conspiracy narratives in television and American political culture. She is the author of Sex Trafficking, Scandal, and the Transformation of Journalism, 1885-1917 (University of Chicago Press, 2013). Her articles have appeared in such journals as American QuarterlyFeminist Formations, The Communication ReviewHumanity, and Critical Studies in Media Communication. 

At the undergraduate level, Soderlund regularly teaches Gender, Media, and Diversity, Media History, and History of Investigative Reporting. Her graduate seminars include Historical Methods and Histories of the Press and Sexuality. 

Soderlund held a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Chicago and served for a year as Assistant Director of the University of Chicago’s Center for the Study of Communication and Society. She is currently Area Director of the Media Studies Program. 

Education

  • PhD, Institute of Communications Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • BA, English, Virginia Commonwealth University

Publications

(Recent)

"Theorizing Sensationalism." Editor, special issue of Feminist Media Histories. 8:4 (Fall 2022), with co-editor Amanda Frisken. 

"Scandal and Sex Trafficking." in The Routledge Companion to Scandal. Routledge, 2019. 361-370.

"Futures of Journalisms Past (or Pasts of Journalism's Future)." Boundary 2.0 (August 2018).

“The Conspiratorial Mode in American Television: Politics, Public Relations, and Journalism in House of Cards and Scandal.” American Quarterly 69:4 (December 2017). 833-856, with co-author Patrick Jones.

 

 

Teaching

  • J201: Media and Society
  • J320: Gender, Media, and Diversity
  • J387: Media History
  • J412: History of Investigative Journalism
  • J413: Media Studies Capstone Seminar
  • J610: Histories of the Press and Sensationalism
  • J643: Advanced Doctoral Seminar
  • J660: HIstorical Methods