journalism history
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Who’s Wearing the Pants?
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NCA Paper About Women Wearing Pants
I am getting ready to present my paper, “Who’s Wearing the Pants? How The New York Times Reported the Changing Dress of Women” at its conference in San Francisco. In it, I examine how the New York Times represented women wearing pants from 1950 through 1975. I found various themes against women wearing pants ranging from political to religious to workplace issues.Some of these articles were in the women’s pages and some were in the hard news sections and editorial sections. Current New York Times columnist Gail Collins wrote of this time: “It was a convoluted expression of the classic view of sexual differences: women did not wear the pants…
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NCA Paper About Women Wearing Pants
I am getting ready to present my paper, “Who’s Wearing the Pants? How The New York Times Reported the Changing Dress of Women” at its conference in San Francisco. In it, I examine how the New York Times represented women wearing pants from 1950 through 1975. I found various themes against women wearing pants ranging from political to religious to workplace issues.Some of these articles were in the women’s pages and some were in the hard news sections and editorial sections. Current New York Times columnist Gail Collins wrote of this time: “It was a convoluted expression of the classic view of sexual differences: women did not wear the pants…
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Interview with Darwin Payne
This morning, I interviewed Dallas historian Darwin Payne. He worked with Dallas Times Herald women’s page editor Vivian Castleberry. They also went to the same church. We gave me same interesting insight and reinforced my premise that it was Vivian’s ability to be ladylike that also allowed her to be so progressive. In other words, she did not come off as threatening so she got away with many things that helped women.
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Interview with Darwin Payne
This morning, I interviewed Dallas historian Darwin Payne. He worked with Dallas Times Herald women’s page editor Vivian Castleberry. They also went to the same church. We gave me same interesting insight and reinforced my premise that it was Vivian’s ability to be ladylike that also allowed her to be so progressive. In other words, she did not come off as threatening so she got away with many things that helped women.
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Conference proposal about Gloria Biggs
Today I am working on an abstract about Gloria Biggs – Florida women’s page editor turned publisher. It is called: “I Weep When I Read the Lines About Not Being the Feminist”: Gloria Biggs’ Transition From Women’s Page Editor to Publisher I am sending it off to a state history conference that will be held next Spring in Jacksonville, Florida – a new city for us to visit. And, best of all, there is a jazz festival in Jacksonville the same weekend. My research on Gloria comes from her papers in the Western Historical Manuscript Collection at the University of Missouri. I also interviewed her niece a few years ago.