Reporting under fire : 16 daring women war correspondents and photojournalists /Kerrie Logan Hollihan
Material type: TextPublisher number: International Book Distributors | ;Flat No.17,Prakash Apartments,5 Ansari Road,New Delhi-110002Publication details: Chicago, Illinois : Chicago Review Press , 2014Description: vi, 249 pages ; 23 cmISBN: 9781613747100Subject(s): Women journalistsGenre/Form: ;Women journalists -- United States -- Biography -- Juvenile literature.DDC classification: 070.4333 HOLItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | SNU LIBRARY | 070.4333 HOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 27222 |
World War I, 1914-1918. Henrietta Goodnough, aka Peggy Hull, reporting from El Paso, Paris, and Vladivostok ; Louise Bryant, Bessie Beatty, and Rheta Childe Dorr, reporting from Petrograd ; Helen Johns Kirtland, reporting from France --
2: Between world wars, 1920--1939. Irene Corbally Kuhn, reporting from Shanghai ; Sigrid Schultz, reporting from Berlin ; Dorothy Thompson, reporting from Berlin --
3: A second World War, 1939-1945. Martha Gellhorn, reporting from Madrid, Chungking, and Normandy ; Margaret Bourke-White, reporting from Moscow, Tunis, and Buchenwald --
4: A cold war, 1945-1989. Marguerite Higgins, reporting from Dachau and Seoul --
5: Ancient peoples, modern wars, 1955-1985. Gloria Emerson, reporting from Paris and Saigon ; Georgie Anne Geyer; reporting from Havana, Guatemala City, Tbilisi, and Baghdad --
6: A challenge that never ends, 1990-present. Janine di Giovanni, reporting from Sarajevo and Kosovo ; Robin Wright, reporting from Ann Arbor, Angola, Beirut, and Cairo ; Martha Raddatz, reporting from the Pentagon, White House, Baghdad, and Kabul.
The tremendous struggles women have faced as war correspondents and photojournalists. A profile of 16 courageous women, Reporting Under Fire tells the story of journalists who risked their lives to bring back scoops from the front lines. Each woman--including Sigrid Schultz, who broadcast news via radio from Berlin on the eve of the Second World War; Margaret Bourke-White, who rode with General George Patton's Third Army and brought back the first horrific photos of the Buchenwald concentration camp; and Marguerite Higgins, who typed stories while riding in the front seat of an American jeep that was fleeing the North Korean Army--experiences her own journey, both personally and professionally, and each draws her own conclusions. Yet without exception, these war correspondents share a singular ambition: to answer an inner call driving them to witness war firsthand, and to share what they learn via words or images
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