A newspaper is a serial publication, appearing usually at least weekly, which serves as a primary source of information on
current events of general interest. While format can vary widely, newspapers are normally published without a cover, but with
a masthead or banner, and are normally larger than 12 by 17 inches.
The Women's Page. John Sloan, artist. 1905. Prints and Photographs Division. LC-USZ62-63847 (b&w film copy neg.) bibliographic record
Open any newspaper today and women can be found on every page—in articles, in advertisements, as reporters, and as publishers.
Finding the women in the newspapers of yesteryear is more of a challenge—women involved in the production of newspapers were
often unnamed, women reporters had to prove their competence, and newspaper publishers and advertisers only slowly recognized
the importance of women as audience and as consumers.
The Library's newspaper collection is the largest such collection in the United States. On a current basis, the Serial and
Government Publications Division receives major titles published in all 50 states and from over 179 foreign countries. Although
the division does not receive every newspaper published in the United States or the world, the collection's sheer size, breadth,
and diversity of viewpoints are unmatched. Scholars researching a broad geographic area or a subject encompassing whole regions
of the United States or foreign countries are able, in a visit to a single institution, to examine a wide range of newspaper
titles with comprehensive, long runs. Most newspapers are housed in the Serial and Government Publications Division. But,
newspapers written in non-roman alphabets—Slavic, Asian, or Near Eastern, for instance—are housed in the appropriate Area Studies divisions.
Other titles that many researchers may consider to be newspapers (such as Anne Royall's Paul Pry, the New York Ledger, Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, and Equal Rights of the National Women's Party) are classified as periodicals in the Library of Congress because they are subject specific
and are not designed for general interest. These are available in the General Collections, the Microform Reading Room, or
the Rare Book and Special Collections Division. Newspapers that the Library classifies as periodicals generally include the
underground press, military camp newspapers, and trade newspapers.