News
For the Women War Correspondents at CBS News, the Office Is a Battlefield. There are no glass ceilings in a bunker. ...
Chapelle was one of the founding generation of female war correspondents in World War II, when women weren’t officially allowed to cover combat — there were no latrines for them at the press ...
The early women war correspondents changed forever how conflict was reported. Here we tell their stories of courage and cunning. By Sarah Blake 12 July 2010 • 7:00am .
The growing acceptance of women war correspondents is ushering in a new kind of reporting for the new-style war–one in which the casualties are women and children more often than soldiers. Also, three ...
Women war correspondents marched to their own drummer Two reporters – Jane Ferguson and Dickey Chapelle – covered separate conflicts in different eras, but both were driven by the need to ...
Leroy was a type familiar to anyone who has covered war in our era. Women correspondents are now commonplace, but they still have to overcome powerful stereotypes, and for some, the only way to be ...
Women in the War Zone: Clarissa Ward, Martha Raddatz, Lyse Doucet and More Correspondents on Covering Ukraine From the Ground Jennifer Maas and K.J. Yossman Thu, May 5, 2022 at 3:00 PM UTC ...
THE CORRESPONDENTS Six Women Writers on the Front Lines of World War II By Judith Mackrell. In Kabul recently after the takeover by the Taliban, I looked around the restaurant terrace of the hotel ...
So, women suffer in silence and add the trauma of rape/sexual assault onto the trauma intendant upon life in a war zone. From the increasingly indispensable Womensenews : Judith Matloff doesn’t ...
How exactly she ended up as a war correspondent remains murky. It is also surprising. In the straitened late-Victorian atmosphere of 1897, Stewart was a 28-year-old woman with a past— and a present.
Where the Action Was: Women War Correspondents in World War II Penny Colman, Penny Coleman. Crown Publishers, $17.95 (128pp) ISBN 978-0-517-80075-1 ...
ISTANBUL—For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, women war correspondents were rare creatures—considered intellectual oddities, more likely to be fetishized than taken seriously as news ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results