This article examines the diverse experiences of three Australian women journalists who covered the Second World War in the European military theatre. It analyses the ways that military policy regarding the accreditation and control of women reporters reinforced gendered understandings of journalism and war. Despite this, the article shows that Australian women journalists reported the war in a variety of ways that extended beyond the home front and the 'woman's angle'.20 page(s
This article examines newspaper coverage of the capture of a team of British sailors and marines on ...
Women war correspondents have overcome gender bias to be able to perform the same work as men in the...
The chapter takes as its starting point the notion that journalists’ safety is a precondition for f...
© 2013 Dr. Jeannine Ann BakerThis thesis is the first comprehensive account of the groundbreaking Au...
Why do Australians know the names of Charles Bean, Alan Moorehead and Chester Wilmot, but not Agnes ...
Australian women journalists were granted equal pay for equal work in 1917, under the first federal ...
Although there have been women reporters on the front lines since the First World War and their numb...
Our social consciousness reserves the role of fighter solely for men. Women are not considered as be...
Women began reporting on war in the mid-nineteenth century, covering, among other wars, Europeans re...
This chapter addresses the conflicting roles of the woman journalist in the context of war and crisi...
Our social consciousness reserves the role of the fighter solely for men. And because of our accepte...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Social Science, Emphasis, Teaching American History, 2006C...
This article explores newspaper reports appearing in the Australian state of Queensland during the m...
A war correspondent has no border, no gender, no religion or race. The only thing a war reporter has...
For a roughly a century, from the 1870s to the 1970s, most Australian newspapers ran a section direc...
This article examines newspaper coverage of the capture of a team of British sailors and marines on ...
Women war correspondents have overcome gender bias to be able to perform the same work as men in the...
The chapter takes as its starting point the notion that journalists’ safety is a precondition for f...
© 2013 Dr. Jeannine Ann BakerThis thesis is the first comprehensive account of the groundbreaking Au...
Why do Australians know the names of Charles Bean, Alan Moorehead and Chester Wilmot, but not Agnes ...
Australian women journalists were granted equal pay for equal work in 1917, under the first federal ...
Although there have been women reporters on the front lines since the First World War and their numb...
Our social consciousness reserves the role of fighter solely for men. Women are not considered as be...
Women began reporting on war in the mid-nineteenth century, covering, among other wars, Europeans re...
This chapter addresses the conflicting roles of the woman journalist in the context of war and crisi...
Our social consciousness reserves the role of the fighter solely for men. And because of our accepte...
Thesis (M.A.)--Humboldt State University, Social Science, Emphasis, Teaching American History, 2006C...
This article explores newspaper reports appearing in the Australian state of Queensland during the m...
A war correspondent has no border, no gender, no religion or race. The only thing a war reporter has...
For a roughly a century, from the 1870s to the 1970s, most Australian newspapers ran a section direc...
This article examines newspaper coverage of the capture of a team of British sailors and marines on ...
Women war correspondents have overcome gender bias to be able to perform the same work as men in the...
The chapter takes as its starting point the notion that journalists’ safety is a precondition for f...