Preview

Compare/contrast Women on the Forefront

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
385 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Compare/contrast Women on the Forefront
What seems to be a common thread with these women on display with the Library of Congress "Women Come to the Front" exhibition, is that they all seem to have wanted to convey the social strife felt by foreign and domestic communities. During War time, jobs were made more available to females in every facet of industry, including photojournalism. The eight women of the exhibit are noted for having both foreign and domestic photographic documentation of the labors of war. Of the eight, three women that seemed to have stood above the rest are; Clare Booth Luce, May Craig, and Dorthea Lange. All three of these women sought truth and transparency with candid photography.
If just perusing the pages of a resume`, Clare Booth Luce is not a woman one would consider to make the leap from high fashion photography to the front lines of battle. Known more as a socialite, first elected congresswoman of Connecticut (1942-1946), playwright, and U.S. ambassador to Italy ("Women Come to the Front", 2014), Clare became successful in the relaying of information from the battlefields to the breakfast table through publishing of books and editorials. Similar to Clare 's strengths are those of May Craig. May became a woman in a leadership role for the Women 's National Press Club and Eleanor Roosevelt 's Press Conference Association and responsible for the advancement of women in journalism in the professional arena ("Women Come to the Front", 2014). While these two women have a part in international photographic documentation of war, Dorthea Lange became a more influential presence on the home front as a documentary photographer, beginning during the Great Depression. Dorthea felt cataloging American citizens suffering from ethnic disparities and displacement of workers was of utmost importance.
Faced with civil and racial atrocities after the development of Japanese-American Imprisonment camps, Dorthea found herself facing an internal struggle and externally with her



References: Morris, S. J. (1997) Rage for Fame. New York, NY: Random House Library of Congress website: http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/wcf/wcf0010.html Women Come to the Front. (2014, January 1). Retrieved September 21, 2014.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Women in the nineteenth century were beginning to liberate themselves. Thus, when the Civil War came along, many women were not content to sit home and set up fund-raisers for the cause. According to the book “Century Of The Struggle” by Elenor Flexner “The influx of women into teaching and their entrance into government offices data from Civil War. Thousands more broke away from stove and laundry tub to look for work in the cities or to do the heavy manual labor required to keep the family homestead going as recorder by Anna Howard Shaw”(106). As a result women began to unchain there chains and began to become fearless. Mrs. Flexner gives us some great examples of women that help and contributed the soldiers during the Civil War (110); for instance: Dorothea Dix known for her work in reforming prisons and insane asylums, at the age of sixty, head of the nursing service in the Union army hospitals(110). The “Mothers” Bickerdyke and Clara Barton, who saw the…

    • 1651 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Lauren Burgess has taken these letters and standardizes the spelling and corrected punctuation only when necessary to better understand the intention of the original writer. She has also included a good deal of supplemental information to the book to help the reader better understand the letters. This book gives the reader a deeper insight into a part of history that seldom thought of or written about. The fact that woman at the time dared to take up arms in defense of the country even with the stigma that would have been attached to them had they been caught. Even the military did not know that Lyon Wakeman was really Sarah Wakeman till the discovery of…

    • 405 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    After reading Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston’s memoir Farewell to Manzanar about the Japanese and her family being interned during World War II. I have a total different point of view on the Japanese internment camps, and I now understand all the anger, shame, and sadness that Jeanne’s family and the other Japanese had more than I did before.…

    • 945 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In The Girl on the Magazine Cover chapter five, the author explains how American history and mass media shaped the image of women. Carolyn Kitch writes about stereotypes for women in the 1900’s and how their origins were created through propaganda posters. Kitch argues how women were represented in two different views during the war times. The “Militant Victory” idea presented women as strong and courageous and was seen as the “New Woman” personality. The contradiction of this was “The Protecting Angel” where women were depicted as angels and nurses who displayed values of the COTW, protecting the conservative notions about females.…

    • 133 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    World War 2 Dbq Analysis

    • 424 Words
    • 2 Pages

    With the huge wave of men leaving, the government urged women to replace them in certain positions. By women filling these certain positions, it made them more knowledgeable and gave women a fantastic chance to do a variety of things they may not have done before. For example, in Document 1, The Women Worker U.S. Department of Labor, Women’s Bureau, 1942 had stated: ‘” Men called to go to war have actually have been replaced by women in types of works they would not formally do. They include taxi drivers, bank tellers, electricians and operating service stations. Even a southern city reports a women manager of a parking lot.”…

    • 424 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    During World War II, a time of confusion and fear settled around America. Previously respected and average everyday citizens became feared and outcast by most people in the United States. “All citizens alike, both in and out of uniform feel the impact of war in greater or lesser measure (Justice Hugo Black).” The government declared that all the people of Japanese descent living along the Pacific coast be sent to live in concentration camps where the living arrangements were not the most pleasant and were overcrowded.…

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book Sophia’s War by Avi, this book was about a young girl named Sophia who stood up to be a spy and was able to get things done, even by herself. In the article, “ Meet the Women of the American Revolution” by Amanda Coletta, is about different women who had impacted society, by doing different duties, to be recognized, not to be insignificant, but to be heroes in the American Revolution and to show that women are just as capable as men. These women share similar characteristics like Sophia. The women who share the same characteristics like Sophia and who have made a huge impact on society, are, Anna Strong, Sybil Ludington, and Emily Geiger, the women who changed History.…

    • 906 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Women's Role In Ww2 Essay

    • 1810 Words
    • 8 Pages

    After the war, many high-ranking officers ‘praised’ the women’s work and service during the war. Among them was General Eisenhower, who had told Congress that at the time of the formation has completely against the idea, however after all their accomplishments, he was convinced that in the beginning he had a wrong perspective. During the war, while men were leaving to go fight, many women stayed home, taking men’s place in factories, government works and even farms.They made clothes, boots and weapons that were used by the soldiers. While some women stayed at home, other women went to fight alongside the men. Women had a big impact on the victory of the United States and its allies during the World War II because they committed their lives to serve alongside the men, took men’s place in factories to supply them with needed supplies, and formed volunteer services in the communities.…

    • 1810 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    However they kept up their attempts to have their work recognised and recorded in the Official war Records Section. These artists included; Isobel Rae, Dora Meeson Coates, Evelyn Chapman, Hilda Rix Nicholas, Vida Lahey and Dora Ohlfsen. The work that female artists created was diverse in capturing a range of different subjects and scenes from behind the lines, ranging from documenting the life at the camps to women working in factories to depicting personal stories of families of…

    • 774 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    December 7th, the Japanese surprise attacked the U.S. Navy Base at Pearl Harbor. This brought the U.S. into WW2. The Japanese attacked with 49 bombers, 40 torpedo planes, 51 dive-bombers, and 43 fighter aircrafts. After the first wave (6:00am- 7:55am) there was a second wave of attack until 9:45am. After the bombing, Japanese Americans were profiled for their race and put into camps. Janet Daijogo was born in California and during 5 to 8 years old, her whole family was taken from their home and moved to camp Topaz. She was too little to understand the injustice and still endures cultural confusion. When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Americans suspected anyone who was of the Japanese race just because of the way they look. Americans were scared they’d have allegiances with their heritage and home country. Overall, Janet Daijogo and many other Japanese Americans were targeted only because of their heritage and we feared they would try to harm “us” more.…

    • 782 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In antebellum America there was little tolerance for autonomous women. Usually females, spanning all classes, were attached to households, dependent on males for status and wealth. Society demanded that domesticity be the woman’s domain, any deviations from this constricting edict was met with disdain. The cultural myth of the model genteel women permeated the fabric of 19th century life. However, with the advent of the Civil War women were required to assume new duties. The temporary shortage of manpower created new opportunities for women, transforming their existence. The vast majority of women met this challenge and mobilized on behalf of the war effort. A critical task women excelled at was espionage, the collecting of information on enemy activity; it utilized all the skills they had acquired maneuvering through a male dominated world. Ironically, the emphatic notions that women were innocent, passive, and vulnerable enabled them to more easily obtain and pass on military secrets during the Civil War.…

    • 1609 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    While many occupied more traditional roles such as nurses or Daughters of the Regiment, others served as spies, while others actually went into battle alongside their male counterparts. The fact of the matter is, woman who went into battle were forced to conceal themselves, and ultimately pose as men, spending the entire war in disguise. The grit and ingenuity of some of the women discussed in this paper, demonstrate the powerful presence of women during the American Civil War. Women motivated to reunite with their family members at war performed incredible feats in order to find their loved ones while at the same time surviving the gruesome realities of war. Other women single handedly braved danger and death to help their respective sides of war, crossing enemy lines, and gathering or imparting information, and in Thompson’s case, leading to the death of a Confederate General. In the end, the women who served in the Civil War will remain within the pages of history just as valiant, and heroic, if not more so than the men they fought alongside…

    • 2480 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    More often that not, conflict occurs between the powerful and the powerless. For those cases that fall under this condition, it typically began with an imbalance of equality, two sides fighting for superiority or just to maintain their own survival. Bruce Beresford’s Paradise road exposes this very distinction but the ones who hold the power and those who don’t, i.e. the supposedly superior Japanese soldiers who are keeping a watch of the women in the Prisoner of War camp. Those Japanese soldiers treat the western women horribly just for the mere fact theat they are who they are – caucasian women. The women who are unfortunate enough to be stuck in this situation have to go through traumatising experiences. They are beaten up brutally – generally for no particular reason, starved for a long period of time, having to face misogynistic behaviours of the Japanese, and most of all, they have no say whatsoever in in response to this degradation. However, this imbalance of power is not only distinct between the Japanese and the women but also between the Japanese themselves. For instance, the interpreter of the colonel is subtly seen the be against what the Japanese are doing and their treatment towards the women. However, he has no power against those higher-ranked soldiers and there is…

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    75 years ago, 120,000 Japanese Americans went from living peacefully in their homes, to living in constant fear and misery in prison camps. Their crime? Being of Japanese descent. Words will never be able to fully explain the horrors that the Japanese American internees went through, but in this essay, their experiences will be explained with respect and as much effort as possible.…

    • 1449 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    This picture http://www.nwhm.org/ProgressiveEra/cartoonwomensphere.html from Puck Magazine 1917 shows in simple detail that women had decided "Woman's sphere is the home wherever she makes good”. This was a critical change in the family style of thinking, these women stepped out of their houses and started volunteer organizations, conducted research and started changing our society. Starting at the local level these changes created many new safeguards on what we know today as basic services, clean water, organized sanitation, as well as setting the standards for housing reform. These local reforms would gradually expand relentlessly into state and federal levels. At the same time women like Ida Tarbell started to begin to expose the corruption in corporations like Standard Oil.…

    • 614 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays