Women War Correspondents of World War IIBloomsbury Academic, 25.10.1989 г. - 187 страници During World War II, women correspondents wanted to be a part of the dramatic and exhilarating scene of wartime conflict as much as their male colleagues. They reported from the war scene because that was where the big story was. This study is an important part of the growing literature which deals with women in journalism. The women who were interviewed were asked about their experiences, including conditions under which they reported, the types of stories they wrote, and their accomplishments as journalists. Those studied were largely newspaper or wire service reporters who were at the front. A few others who wrote for magazines are included because of particularly interesting experiences or personalities. The obstacles that women correspondents faced are recounted here. For example, they found it difficult to get passports from the State Department and accreditation from the War Department. They faced antagonism from certain generals and sometimes bias and fear of competition from their male colleagues. On the other hand, many women discuss the help and support they received from men at the front. |
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Lilya Wagner. 14 Martha Gellhorn " In the Second World War , all I did was praise the good , brave and generous people I saw , knowing this to be a perfectly useless perfor- mance . " Martha Gellhorn wrote this in the 1959 introduction ...
... ocean journey . " 7 When Christmas Eve came , she had completed her Collier's assign- ment and had written articles about Sweden as well . By this time she was not only a seasoned war correspondent but an acclaimed Martha Gellhorn 119.
... Gellhorn , The Face of War , xii . 20. Ibid . , xix . 21. Ibid . 22. Gellhorn , The View From the Ground , 111 . 15 Shelley Mydans " Perhaps I am best known for Martha Gellhorn 129.
Съдържание
Introduction | 1 |
Ann Stringer | 7 |
Iris Carpenter | 19 |
Авторско право | |
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