Invisible Stars: A Social History of Women in American Broadcasting

· M.E. Sharpe
4.0
2 reviews
Ebook
331
Pages

About this ebook

The early years of American broadcasting seem to be an exclusively white male preserve, but broadcast historian Donna Halper documents the countless contributions made by women in this field since its earliest days. This artful social history considers our culture's expectations of women and how those expectations changed throughout the twentieth century, how the advent of television changed the landscape of employment opportunities for women in broadcasting, and how both television and radio communicate about gender roles. Invisible Stars brings the stories of key people like Bertha Brainard (one of the first women on the air in New York -- and the first woman executive at NBC), Dorothy Thompson (the first woman in radio to make the cover of Time), influential talk show host Mary Margaret McBride, and many others to their proper prominence.

Ratings and reviews

4.0
2 reviews
A Google user
February 5, 2011
Fascinating. My mother was Jane Tiffany Wagner......one of the pioneers. She continued on after the war years with NBC as producer of the radio show called "Home Is What You Make It". The members of our family were guests many Sundays on the Mary Margaret McBride morning radio shows. My mother never shared, never discussed, the world of men around her and their reaction to her leading roles in broadcasting. Too bad.
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