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Newspaper Women and the Making of the Modern, 1885—1910

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 July 2009

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Extract

“Inever shall forget my thrill at the phrase cover it,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Zona Gale wrote of her early newspaper work in New York City from 1901 to 1903: “When I was actually a reporter, I used to go about my work saying to myself, ‘I'm out on an assignment!’ People talked about the newspaper grind. But I was more than happy in it. I was ecstatic.”

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Research Article
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2002

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References

NOTES

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14. See Journalist, January 26, 1889.

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26. Ibid.

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29. Ibid., 74, 75.

30. Ibid., 74, 76, 77.

31. Ibid., 77, 91–92, 95.

32. Ibid., 92, 95.

33. O'Hagan, , “Women in Journalism,” 611Google Scholar.

34. Jordan, , Three Rousing Cheers, 14Google Scholar.

35. Hamm, , “Among the Newspaper Women,” Journalist, 05 28, 1892, 6Google Scholar.

36. Fairfax, [Manning, ], Ladies, 23Google Scholar.

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38. Kroeger, , Nellie Bly, 102Google Scholar.

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41. Banks, , Autobiography, 7991, 101, 103Google Scholar.

42. Ibid., 100–101.

43. Ibid., 101.

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46. Ibid., 205.

47. Kelly, , Flowing Stream, 458Google Scholar.

48. Cather, , The World, 531, 528Google Scholar.

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50. Dorr, , Woman of Fifty, 103–5Google Scholar.

51. Manning, , Ladies, 3334Google Scholar.

52. Ibid., 34, 33.

53. Ibid., 34.

54. Ibid., 37–38.

55. “I Wonder Why Bill Bailey Don't Come Home,” words by Frank Fogerty and music by Woodward and Jerome, 1902.

56. Dorr, , Woman of Fifty, 9697Google Scholar.

57. Ibid., 101–2.

58. Manning, , Ladies, 157Google Scholar.

59. Ibid., 157–58. On the subject of reporting the activities of women's clubs, Eliza D. Keith remembered that “a clever editor” once said to her, “Any newspaper woman who wants to make a sensation, has only to join some of these women's societies, and when she gets on to all their little idiosyncracies [sic], to write 'em up! Such stuff would make a capital story.” Keith commented, “No doubt, but how about the woman that would do it? The role of Judas is a masculine one!” (A Choice of Subjects,” Journalist, 11 7, 1891, 13Google Scholar).

60. Hamm, , “Among the Newspaper Women,” Journalist, 12 5, 1891, 12Google Scholar.

61. Manning, , Ladies, 27Google Scholar.

62. Ibid., 61–63.

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65. Stansell, American Moderns.

66. Graham, , Viola, the Duchess of New Dorp, 1: 279Google Scholar.

67. Hamm, , “Among the Newspaper Women,” Journalist, 03 26, 1892, 13Google Scholar.

68. Ibid.

69. Meyerowitz, Women Adrift.

70. Hamm, , “Among the Newspaper Women,” Journalist, 03 26, 1892, 13Google Scholar.

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73. Ibid., 632.

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93. Ibid.

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96. Ibid., 570–71.

97. Ibid., 572–3.

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99. Ibid., 74–75.

100. Ibid., 75.

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102. Ibid., 322.

103. Ibid., 337.

104. Ibid., 338.

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108. Ibid., 74–75.

109. See, for instance, a similar anecdote in Banks, , Autobiography, 4651Google Scholar.

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111. Ibid., 21–29.

112. Ibid., 23–24.

113. Cather, , The World, 531Google Scholar.

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115. Ibid., 213–21.

116. Ibid., 222–29.

117. Ibid., 227–31.

118. Ibid., 223.

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120. Jordan, , Tales, 107–8, 105–6, 117Google Scholar.

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