'An Unladylike Profession' by Chris Dubbs - Book review
When bestselling mystery novelist Mary Roberts Rinehart, in 1914, asked the editor of the Saturday Evening Post to send her to Europe to cover the war that had just broken out there, he at first refused. Frankly, he replied by telegram, I do not care to take the responsibility of sending anyone over there except old maids, widows and our really tough boys. Rinehart, a middle-aged wife and mother, knew nothing about the military, and she had never worked as a journalist, much less covered a war. Yet she managed to persuade the reluctant editor that she was up to the job, becoming the first journalistfemale or maleto report from the frontline trenches. Her coverage for the two million readers of the Saturday Evening Post helped shape the American publics understanding of the Great War.
Rinehart is just one of the nearly three dozen female war correspondents whose personalities and accomplishments Chris Dubbs brings vividly to life in An Unladylike Profession. This slice of World War I history offers insights into American journalism as well as into the terrible conflict itself. Mr. Dubbs is an independent military historian, and this is his third volume on World War I. He writes with a sure hand, drawing from published articles, memoirs, diaries and letters. He skillfully presents each womans story in a linked series of rivetingsometimes heart-breakingnarratives.
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As Mr. Dubbs takes pains to emphasize, female correspondents did everything their male counterparts did: They reported from the frontlines, came under fire, were wounded or taken prisoner, and risked arrest by smuggling forbidden writing out of warring countries. More than their male counterparts, however, Mr. Dubbs writes, the work of women war correspondents defined the Great War in terms of its impact on individual lives. This approach proved to be one of the most important stories of the war, and it transformed the nature of war reporting.
Women found human-interest stories in every corner of the conflict. Mary Boyle OReilly of the Newspaper Enterprise Association joined a column of refugees fleeing German atrocities in Belgium and wrote about the wars crushing impact on women and children. Marie Gallison, a German-born American, traveled to her native land in 1916, before the U.S. entered the war. Her articles for the Outlook were among the few in the American press that were sympathetic to Germans. On a reporting trip to Constantinople, Eleanor Egan of the Saturday Evening Post uncovered evidence of one of the biggest stories of the 20th century: Turkeys systematic killing and deportation of its Armenian population. In Armenia, she found a land of hideous human suffering and degradation.
Female reporters sometimes resorted to indirect means to gain access to the front. When Mary Roberts Rinehart arrived in Europe, the British and the French, eager to control the flow of information, refused to allow journalists anywhere near combat. Rinehart, who had trained as a nurse, got her scoop by asking the Belgian Red Cross to give her a tour of the war zone. The Belgians were happy to comply, believing that her sympathetic reporting would result in much-needed contributions from Americans. Other women overcame bureaucratic hurdles or discrimination from male officials by volunteering with the Red Cross, the Salvation Army, the YMCA or other organizations that worked near the fighting. As the war progressed, American editors began to recognize that the womens angle constituted news. The Evening Public Ledger, in Philadelphia, dispatched the editor of its womens pages to Europe. Good Housekeeping and Ladies Home Journal sent correspondents. When the U.S. entered the war in 1917, Rheta Childe Dorr, a journalist whose son was posted at the front, chose to write from a mothers point of view. She penned 30 articles for the New York Evening Mail under the title A Soldiers Mother in France.
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One of the few women with prior experience as a war correspondent was Peggy Hull of the El Paso Morning Times. In 1916 she had covered the U.S. incursion into Mexico, where she had earned the respect of Gen. John J. Pershing, who went on to become commander of the American Expeditionary Forces on the Western Front. With Pershings imprimatur, Hull became the first female correspondent to be credentialed by the U.S. Army. She wrote the words that could serve as an epigraph for every reporter of the Great War: New horrors pounce upon me from every direction.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/an-unladylike-profession-review-new-recruits-over-there-11593973451 (subscription)
Amy-Strange
(854 posts)-
that makes you my hero!
Did you know that most coders (before the big computer explosion) were woman?
That's because back then it was considered women's work.
Check it out:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_computing
Anyway, thank you for posting this.
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question everything
(47,465 posts)Yes, questioning everything, including some dogmas on these pages often got me in trouble..
Katherine Johnson was one of the first woman computing at NASA and earned many awards.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Johnson
And the movie based on these pioneering women - Hidden Figures was really uplifting.