General Introduction - Print media in a foreign language across the Atlantic: common grounds, diverging approaches
págs. 1-25
The Hebrew 'Wandering Press' in Europe: "Ha-Levanon" from Jerusalem to Paris, Mainz and London (1863-86)
págs. 27-44
A transnational radical print culture: French language anarchist periodicals between London, Paris and the United States before 1914
págs. 45-62
Collaborating across the Atlantic: Gigi Damiani and the Italian anarchist press in the United States (1909-45)
págs. 63-79
French-language almanacs in the United States, from the eighteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century: genres, social dimensions and transcultural adaptations
págs. 81-92
'A modest sentinel for German interests in England': the Anglo-German press in the long nineteenth century
págs. 93-108
The soul of the colony: origins and cultural imaginary of the Portuguese-language press in the United States (1877-2019)
págs. 109-124
'Spotlight on Jim Crow': radical Slovak and Polish immigrant newspapers in solidarity with Black Civil Rights
págs. 125-142
págs. 143-161
Betwixt Spain and England: the Spanish liberals' Spanish-language media strategies in London (1810-50)
págs. 163-176
The "Megali Idea" in New York's Greek-language press (1915-22): doing Greek polities from a distance?
págs. 177-192
Barzini overseas: the "Corriere d'America", from promoting italianità to fascist propaganda
págs. 193-205
Why French?: the multiple uses of French-language periodicals in London (UK) and Sydney (Australia) during the nineteenth century and beyond
págs. 207-222
págs. 223-236
Divergency in Russian emigré publishing in late Victorian Britain: the case of the "Narodovolets" and "The Anglo-Russian"
págs. 237-258
"Le Haiasdan", "L'Arménie", "Armenia" and "Hnch'ak": language choice and the construction of a cosmopolitan Armenian diasporic identity in London and Paris (1888-1905)
págs. 259-278
The power of the transnational native tongue in exile: Belgian refugees during the First World War, their exile press and their fragmented identity
págs. 279-296
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