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Dorothy Bar-Adon : ウィキペディア英語版 | Dorothy Bar-Adon Dorothy Bar-Adon (August 2, 1907-August 7, 1950) was an American-born Israeli journalist. Her early experience as a correspondent was gained on ''The Atlantic City'' (Jersey ) ''Press''. From her immigration to Palestine in 1933 until her death she worked as a journalist for ''The Palestine Post'' (later to become ''The Jerusalem Post''), covering a wide range of international and domestic issues. ==Women in Journalism== Many late nineteenth-century newspapers, as Chambers, et al., note, “aimed to attract more women readers by introducing what came to be labelled as ‘women’s journalism,’ a style of news writing confined to society news, reports on changing fashions and feature articles on domestic issues. These stories for women readers were written by women reporters” (''Women and Journalism'' p. 17). During World War I, according to Beasley and Gibbons, women journalists were hired to replace men; this phenomenon was to accelerate during World War II (''Taking Their Place'' p. 53). By the early 1930s, it was thus not unusual for women to work as newspaper reporters. Some women in journalism functioned as correspondents covering news on the national and international level. On the other hand, women were seen as especially suited to cover the arts, as well as what came to be known as “human interest” stories. Women’s supposed humane, emotional side as expressed in their reporting often led to their being termed "sob sisters".
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