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Anonymous in Their Own Names

Doris E. Fleischman, Ruth Hale, and Jane Grant
E-bookEPUBAdobe DRM [Hard-DRM]E-book
EUR18,99

Product description

Anonymous in Their Own Names recounts the lives of three women who, while working as their husbands' uncredited professional partners, had a profound and enduring impact on the media in the first half of the twentieth century. With her husband, Edward L. Bernays, Doris E. Fleischman helped found and form the field of public relations. Ruth Hale helped her husband, Heywood Broun, become one of the most popular and influential newspaper columnists of the 1920s and 1930s. In 1925 Jane Grant and her husband, Harold Ross, started the New Yorker magazine.


Yet these women's achievements have been invisible to countless authors who have written about their husbands. This invisibility is especially ironic given that all three were feminists who kept their birth names when they married as a sign of their equality with their husbands, then battled the government and societal norms to retain their names. Hale and Grant so believed in this cause that in 1921 they founded the Lucy Stone League to help other women keep their names, and Grant and Fleischman revived the league in 1950. This was the same year Grant and her second husband, William Harris, founded White Flower Farm, pioneering at that time and today one of the country's most celebrated commercial nurseries.


Despite strikingly different personalities, the three women were friends and lived in overlapping, immensely stimulating New York City circles. Susan Henry explores their pivotal roles in their husbands' extraordinary success and much more, including their problematic marriages and their strategies for overcoming barriers that thwarted many of their contemporaries.
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Details

Additional ISBN/GTIN9780826518484
Product TypeE-book
BindingE-book
FormatEPUB
FormatReflowable
Publishing date15/07/2012
LanguageEnglish
File size5490425 Bytes
Article no.6439805
CatalogsVC
Data source no.515236
Product groupBU931
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Author

Susan Henry is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at California State University, Northridge, and a former editor of Journalism History.

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