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Subject: AEJ 95 SteinerL Women Modesty and anger in autobiographies
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Tue, 30 Jan 1996 20:39:47 EST
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Modesty and Anger in Autobiographies of Women Journalists, 1900-1940
Linda Steiner
Rutgers University, Department of Journalism and Mass Media
 
        Elizabeth Jordan began her 1938 autobiography Three Rousing Cheers by
 
  explaining that the title expressed her devotion to good friends, who used
 
       the expression as greeting, farewell, and rallying cry.   In hastening to
deny
 that her title was"the offspring of any delusion as to my individual
 
 importance" (vii), Jordan provided nearly a paradigmatic example of the
 
   self-effacement some critics have claimed characterizes women's
autobiography.
 Later Jordan commented, "I have been pianiste, reporter, newspaper editor,
 
       magazine editor, public speaker, playwright, dramatic critic, and
novelist,
 
       which helps to explain why I have never done any one thing superlatively
well"
 (11).  An even more self-deprecating remark came from Milly Bennett, who
 
     prefaced her autobiography, written around 1938, with the comment that
friends
 had encouraged her to describe her experiences covering the Chinese
       Revolution.  But, she said, reading the drafts made her sick, provoking
the
 
       question, "Good God!  Did I write this---this nonsense?"
        Women's autobiographies written before the 1970s tend, according to Carolyn
 
       Heilbrun, "to find beauty even in pain and to transform rage into
spiritual
 
       acceptance" (1988, 12).  In Writing a Woman's Life, Heilbrun accuses
female
 
       autobiographers of consistently refusing to acknowledge their anger,
their
 
      desire for control over their own lives, and their interest in public
power.
 
       Well into the twentieth century, says Heilbrun, looking at a range of
autobio
 
       graphy and biography, women could not admit their ambitions or
achievements,
 
       such that even women of considerable accomplishment have attributed their
 
     success to luck or to others' generosity.
        Other feminist historians and literary scholars find passivity and
       sentimentality tainting the stories of women's lives.  Patricia Spacks
(1976)
 
       says eighteenth-century women's autobiographies always managed to
transform
 
       feminine strength into a confession of inadequacy.  Moreover, the radical
 
     twentieth-century heroines, such as Emma Goldman, Eleanor Roosevelt, and
Golda
 Meir, underplayed their own importance;  they accepted responsibility for
 
      failure but avoided claims of ambition (Spacks, 1980).  According to Jill
 
     Conway (1992), Progressive era women similarly represented themselves in
their
 autobiographies as nurturing or as swept along by forces outside their
 
   control, although their letters and diaries reported more assertive, decisive
 
       behavior.  Several literary critics speculate that the woman
autobiographer
 
       essentially re-writes stories that already exist about women, since by
seeking
 to publicize herself she violates "an important cultural construction of her
 
       femininity as passive or hidden" (Anderson 1986).  Uneasy at having
violated
 
       cultural expectations, women adopt a modest tone to win readers'
sympathies
 
       (Winston 1980).
        This research examines autobiographies by five women working for general
 
     interest newspapers in the early twentieth century.  The major question was
 
       the extent to which these women defined themselves in terms of gender
and/or
 
       whether they defined themselves as journalists.  The corollary issue is
 
   whether they expressed a sense that others--their editors, publishers,
 
  colleagues, sources, readers--regarded them as women, even when they saw
 
    themselves as journalists. Particular attention is paid to occasions when
 
     these women discussed whether they saw themselves as having a "woman's
point
 
       of view" or "women's standpoint," even if they did not use that
particular
 
      vocabulary, that might affect the way they approached story choice or
 
 assignment, ethical dilemmas, and other professional issues.  In part the goal
 here is to see whether these reporters' lives--as they literally self-wrote
 
       their public writing careers--follow the pattern of writers described by
 
    Heilbrun, Spacks, and Conway.  The point is not trying to determine why they
 
       construed their lives the way they did.  The one recent journalism
scholar
 
      seriously interested in autobiography assumes psychological motives,
seeing
 
       the writers as essentially driven by personal or historic upheaval to
create
 
       literary fictions that "plug the sudden cracks in their identities" (Good
 
     1993, 3).  Rather than speculate about the individuals' psyches or
womankind,
 
       the goal is to understand the professional status of women journalists as
 
     perceived by these women, and the way they reconciled conflicts between
work
 
       and family life, if indeed they addressed such conflicts.
        The earliest autobiography studied here was published in 1902 by Elizabeth
 
       Banks (who died in 1938 at age 68).  Banks wrote for a couple of American
 
     newspapers, but was best known for free-lanced work serialized in the
British
 
       press. Another autobiographer included is Florence Finch Kelly,
self-described
 dean of American newswomen, whose autobiography appeared shortly before her
 
       death, at age 81, in 1939;  she worked for newspapers in Kansas,
Illinois,
 
      Massachusetts, California, and New Mexico and then wrote for the New York
 
     Times Book Review for thirty years.  Elizabeth Jordan (1865-47) worked for
the
 New York World for ten years, before going to Harper's Bazar and published
 
       her autobiography in 1938;  Milly Bennett (1897-1959) worked for various
 
    organs of the Chinese Nationalist Party, then returned to the San Francisco
 
       News, and later served as a foreign correspondent in Russia;  and in 1933
Joan
 Lowell described how she found adventure, pay, and "regeneration" as "Gal
 
      Reporter" for the Boston Daily Record.
        The period under study involved tremendous growth in the number of newspapers
 and of journalists, including women. Enough women were employed as
       journalists in the United States to understand themselves as a
category--but a
 category still distinctly in the minority, in a profession widely
       acknowledged as male.  Furthermore, this period heard frequent discussion
 
     about the changing roles of women;  emerging models for "modern" women
brought
 greater self-consciousness about gender. Heilbrun dates the first true modern
 (i.e., explicit about a woman's anger as such) autobiography to 1973, when
 
       May Sarton published her second autobiographical book.1   Yet, at the
least,
 
       these five women were modern in their identification with work (Good
1993).2
         The first personal document by a woman to be called an autobiography was
 
      written in 1814 by Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle.  Cavendish
 
   answered the question she imagined others would ask: "Why hath this Lady
write
 her own life...[I]t is to no purpose to the Readers, but it is to the
 
  Authoress, because I write for my own sake, not theirs...." (in Stanton 1994).
  Yet, her story and stories of subsequent women are instructive to readers.
 
       These autobiographies are not referenced for facts about these women or
their
 
       personal/professional interactions as women and reporters.  Although the
paper
 will occasionally mention biographical "facts" about the women, the focus is
 
       how they wrote about themselves.  Nor is the claim here that they
presented
 
       the "truth" about their lives.  Indeed, it is in the context of
discussing
 
      women's attempt to stitch together a self-portrait emphasizing a romantic
kind
 of femininity and womanhood that Heilbrun quotes Virginia Woolf's comment
 
      that "very few women yet have written truthful autobiographies."  Recent
 
    literature in autobiography makes impossible any acceptance of autobiography
 
       as recitation of transparent fact.  On the other hand, unlike critics
such as
 
       Howard Good (1993), I do not assume that these autobiographers
significantly,
 
       consistently, or intentionally distorted their accounts.3  In any case,
women
 
       reporters are a particularly interesting group of women writers to study,
 
     since, at least during the time period under study, they were more
obviously
 
       intruding into a male territory, relative to poets and novelists, or, for
that
 matter, other women professionals who happened to write autobiography.  As an
 attempt to give the self a narrative, autobiography is always bound up with
 
       identity, one that is self-constructed (Anderson 1986).  Given the
       collaborative, or at least highly edited nature of their work, their
published
 news stories cannot reveal or express their views on these questions.  Thus,
 
       autobiography becomes the best available resource for examining how these
 
     women might have understood themselves as women practicing journalism.
        The five autobiographies used here, located through standard bibliographies,
 
       were chosen because they seemed representative of both the range and
focus of
 
       autobiographies published by women journalists before World War II.  Of
 
   course, not all women journalists wrote autobiographies.  More importantly,
 
       those who did were not necessarily either the "best" reporters, by any
 
  criteria, or the best known.  Indeed, it may speak to autobiography's
 
 relatively marginal status as a literary genre that not only have women long
 
       published autobiography, but also little-known figures have written their
 
     lives.  Whatever regularities appear in these autobiographies, therefore,
are
 
       not necessarily representative of women journalists of the era.
Furthermore,
 confirming the ambiguous status of self-writing as a genre, the territory
 
      covered in these books varies.  Perhaps illustrating of the others'
       modesty--it being apparently enough of a public declaration to reveal
oneself
 
       at all--only Florence Finch Kelly's was a full-scale autobiography that
began
 
       with her ancestors and progressed chronologically through the period of
 
   writing.  Kelly's 571 page autobiography, complete with index and tables of
 
       content for each chapter, included not only detailed accounts of her life
but
 
       also extensive sermonizing on sundry topics, from the value of college
 
  education to the problems of "today's youth," as well as chapters on the
 
    history and status of journalism and women in journalism.  Nonetheless,
 
   whatever their literary goals, all five focussed on work, with only enough
 
      mention of early education and adolescent ambition to justify their career
 
      choice.
The Culture of Autobiography
        Friedrich Schlegel commented in 1798 that pure autobiographies are written by
 neurotics fascinated by their own egos; authors of "a robust artistic or
 
     adventuresome self-love"; born historians; pedants who refuse to leave the
 
      world without commentary; and "women who also coquette with posterity" (in
 
      Folkenflik 1993,3).  The observation is notable in two respects. First,
 
   although theoretical interest in autobiography as a genre has essentially
 
     developed over the last two decades, autobiography itself has a long
       tradition.  Already in 1786 the so-called "milkmaid poet" described
strained
 
       relations with her patron in an "autobiographical narrative" (Folkenflik,
1).
 Moreover, women have been writing autobiography for an equally long time.
 
       The first woman to compose her life story in English, Margery Kempe wrote
an
 
       account of spiritual development between 1432-1436, although it was not
 
   actually published until 1940 (Glenn 1992).  Nonetheless, much of the initial
 
       theorizing and academic literature about autobiography ignored that by
women.
 The canon was male--Rousseau, Augustine, Adams.  Indeed, a peculiarly ironic
 
       parallel emerges with women's journalism and women's writings, which have
been
 disparaged, it seems, merely because they were, or were perceived to have
 
      been, written by women.  So, too, autobiographical writing has been a
positive
 term when applied to the male canon, but has negative connotations applied to
 women's writing, referencing the notion that women cannot transcend, but only
 record their private concerns (Stanton 1984).  Quite possibly, the general
 
       marginalization of autobiography, until recently, has resulted from its
access
 to women, especially when diaries, memoirs, and letters are considered within
 the genre.  The flip side of the argument is that autobiography's reputation
 
       as a "lesser form" (i.e., compared to epic poetry or drama, which made
grand
 
       claims to high artistic achievement, requiring divine creativity) assured
its
 
       survival as a genre for women and other marginalized people (Marcus
1988).
        Regardless of the number of women writing autobiography, feminist critics
 
      claim that the critical theory was long based on a male canon,
particularly
 
       Augustine's dramatic story of conversion and victory of spirit over
flesh, and
 Rousseau's secular story of self-discovery.  This, they say, results in
 
    misreadings of women's texts--to misunderstandings of how women's
       autobiographical writings highlight different themes and different models
of
 
       the individuated self (Friedman 1988).  Mary Mason's (1980) reading of
four
 
       early autobiographies leads her to posit a "distinct mode of interior
 
 disclosure."  Mason  believes female autobiographers' preference for
       self-disclosure through identification with some "other" continues to the
 
     present.  Estelle Jelinek (1980) says men tend to make their lives into a
 
     coherent whole;  conversely, women's narratives are "disconnected,
fragmentary
 or organizing into self-sustained units rather than connecting chapters"
 
     (17).  Criteria such as orderliness and harmonious shaping, imported from
the
 
       male tradition, not only are irrelevant to women's autobiographies but
also
 
       misrepresent their value, Jelinek adds.
"The Kindness of  Mankind"
        Florence Finch Kelly's 1939 autobiography is exceptional in many respects,
 
       not the least is which her sharp, remarkably modern-sounding bitterness
about
 
       her difficulties--as a woman--securing a foothold in journalism.  Kelly,
who
 
       expressed her admiration of several "feminists" without explicitly using
that
 
       word to describe herself, analyzed every era, every paper, and every city
she
 
       mentioned in terms of how it treated women.  Of the Boston Herald editor
who
 
       tried to cheat her, she insisted: "It was my first, but far from my last,
 
     experience of the ruthless injustice to which my sex would submit me in the
 
       newspaper world.  For I did not believe that he would have tried this
crooked
 
       game upon me if I had been a man." (1939, 155).  She emphasized how she
 
   "burned with indignation" at the various injustices done her and at the
 
   implausible explanations editors and publishers used to exclude women or
treat
 them unfairly once hired.  "In office after office I was met by the
       stereotyped statement, 'We don't believe in women in journalism,' uttered
with
 an air of finality that evidently was intended to destroy all hope in any
 
      skirted applicant" (155).   Kelly (then Finch) was not deterred; instead
of
 
       retreating from the siege, she continued to butt her head against "the
stone
 
       walls of entrenched conservatism."
        At one point, Kelly's autobiography suddenly adopted a more conciliatory
 
     tone, saying editors of the 1880s should not be judged by the very
different
 
       views of the 1930s: "They were representatives of the ideas then almost
 
   universally held, the voices of their own time; and if the desires and
 
  ambitions of any young woman led her to challenge those ideas and to try to do
 battle with them in their strongest entrenchments, inevitably she would have
 
       a hard road to travel" (159).  Furthermore, she stipulated, once hired,
she
 
       was treated respectfully and courteously by male colleagues.  But she
 
 punctuated her account with accusations that men marginalized or trivialized
 
       her work, simply because a woman had produced it.  After one such
incident,
 
       she said: "The injustice of my situation stung me to the quick. Viewing
my
 
      work objectively and with all modesty, I knew that it was quite as good
and as
 important as that of my men colleagues, and that it was more varied and more
 
       difficult than that of most of them" (189).  That the men earned at least
 
     twice as much compounded the insult.
        Elizabeth Banks' descriptions of her early efforts to find journalism work
 
       expressed what a more common theme:  the generosity of men despite her
own
 
      naivete and immaturity, and the cruelty of women.   The Wisconsin-born
Banks
 
       dedicated The Autobiography of a Newspaper Girl (1902) to her editor,
"who,
 
       being modest and retiring in his disposition, would not wish me to name
him."
 Banks  maintained a flat, self-mocking tone to describe how, after she
 
   prepared herself for journalism by learning stenography and typing, no editor
 
       wanted her "valuable services."  She was forced to accept a secretarial
job,
 
       where, to her embarrassment, she sat by a window where passersby could
watch
 
       her.  But what seemed to have been significant to her was not this
affront but
 her ability to use this experience to write a story about her work as a
 
    "typewriter girl."  More importantly, as soon as it appeared, she first quit
 
       her job and then demanded a job from the newspaper that published it.
 
  According to Banks, the publisher responded, "Don't think of it, my poor
 
    child.  Be anything, but don't be a newspaper girl" (6). Nonetheless, in the
 
       face of pleading and threats, he agreed to use her as a secretary in the
 
    morning.  In the afternoons, he advised her on the stories she wrote, at
first
 primarily fashion pieces.
        After Banks returned from a stint in Peru as assistant to the U.S.
       ambassador, she resumed her career as "a newspaper girl."  On one hand,
Banks
 
       opposed the "old-fashioned" notion of her editor, an ex-confederate
colonel,
 
       that a press office was not within "woman's sphere."  In any case, he was
 
     overruled by the publisher, who believed that the Baltimore paper needed
one
 
       woman.  Banks received carte blanche to do what and as she wanted.  The
men on
 the staff decorated her cubicle with flowers and curtains, and even once
 
     raided a competitor's composing room so that she would get a scoop.
According
 to Banks, kindly male reporters and editors, both in the United States and
 
       England, often helped her.  Banks admitted that after she once overheard
her
 
       managing editor defend her privileges, she repudiated her special
treatment.
 
       But when he subsequently sent her out in the rain to cover a story, she
 
   decided she did not like being treated like a man.  "So I was restored to my
 
       former happy state of mind" (44).
        Although the other women were far less complacent about their special status,
 a couple of the other autobiographers used remarkably similar self-effacing
 
       language to recall how men gave them getting work, despite their
inexperience.
 Elizabeth Jordan described how the World editor granted her an interview and
 
       a job (on her own unreasonable terms) despite her evident immaturity.
"Never
 
       before, I am sure, had he come into contact with such a combination of
 
  ignorance and ambition, frankness and reserve, self-confidence and childish
 
       modesty, as I was revealing" (19).  But Jordan also remembered some
unpleasant
 experiences as a young reporter, including some "horribly degrading" winks
 
       and passes.  "There was a period when I was wretched over them--when I
felt
 
       that they not only smirched me but that, in a way, I might be responsible
for
 
       them."  Apparently,  she stopped blaming herself when she realized that
her
 
       friend Margaret Sangster, then in her 60s and an editor at Harper's
Bazar,
 
      endured the same thing.
        Joan Lowell began Gal Reporter (1933) by ridiculing her ignorance of newsroom
 jargon and structure.  Given her own earlier unpleasant experiences with the
 
       press, she had looked on reporters "as a special brand of lice who butted
into
 your affairs and then wrote lies about you..." (4).4  She found reporters to
 
       be very different from the drunken monsters seen in film.  Lowell called
her
 
       editor "a marvel of quiet, low-voiced efficiency" and she appreciated
both his
 patience and his confidence in her.  Referring to Walter Hovey, she said, "I
 
       didn't see any lecherous look in his eyes that would bespeak a life
devoted to
 digging up exposes of love nests, unwed mothers and yellow sheet scandal."
 
       On the other hand, unlike Kelly, Joan Lowell also complained of rude
       colleagues and crude competitors.  Lowell described several sexist
incidents
 
       involving sources and colleagues.  She claimed she did not stoop to their
 
     tricks, although she also explicitly advised would-be women reporters to
 
    follow her model and exploit their femininity, when advantageous.  Becoming
a
 
       "good Gal Reporter" required a woman to pocket her pride and use her
feminine
 
       wiles (49).
        These journalists also complained of mistreatment by women.  Regarding her
 
       job as full-time society editor, Banks said: "Honesty compels me to say
that
 
       during those first few months of my journalistic career there were not
very
 
       many kind hands stretched out to me by the members of my own sex with
whom my
 
       reportorial duties brought me in contact" (13).  Society women were
       particularly arrogant and inconsiderate.  Banks explicitly contrasted the
 
     "thoughtlessness of the womankind" with the "kindness of the mankind" (15).
 
       She went to some effort to clarify that men helped her, apparently
       anticipating that otherwise readers might imagine the men were merely
being
 
       patronizing.  For example, the policemen who chivalrously escorted her
home
 
       after covering late-night parties apparently referred to her as "the
little
 
       reporter" (a couple of policemen and reporters were willing to marry her
so
 
       that she shouldn't have to work at all).  She hastened to explain that
she
 
      "felt it no dishonor and not derogatory to my dignity to be known among
the
 
       police only by that name."  Lowell, too, appreciated the genial, generous
 
     Irish cops who looked out for her.  "I can't say as much for those of my
own
 
       sex.  To paraphrase Bobby Burns, 'Woman's inhumanity to woman makes
countless
 
       thousands mourn.'" (54).
 
Disparaging the women's page
        The five women all saw worthy work as that written for general sections of
 
       general newspapers and they reserved some of their most severe criticism
for
 
       the kinds of writing they understood to be typically associated with
women.
 
       Covering millinery openings was Kelly's first job, and she admitted a
brief
 
       stint writing society news had provided basic training in journalistic
 
  technique.  Nonetheless, Kelly equated society reporting with unimportant
 
     work.  Kelly was extremely proud of her writing about women, including her
 
      columns for women for the Globe and the Los Angles Times.  Kelly, then,
was
 
       path-breaking in her ability to break out a wholly new form of writing
for and
 about women that had nothing to do with traditional women's pages.
        Jordan's first job (after learning shorthand at a local business school) was
 
       editing the woman's page of a Milwaukee newspaper owned by a family
friend.
 
       Jordan was not thrilled with the opportunity to supply "light and warmth
to
 
       the women of the universe":  "It is a miracle that the stuff I had to
carry in
 'Sunshine' did not permanently destroy my interest in newspaper work."
 
     Later, too, Jordan specified her willingness to work hard at any assignment
 
       except society news.  "I drew the line at that."  Furthermore, Jordan was
not
 
       happy to get caught in a power struggle between Colonel Cockerill, who
hired
 
       her but whose authority was waning, and Ballard Smith, the managing
editor.
 
       Yet, she did not complain, even when temporarily banished to the World's
 
    Brooklyn edition.  She merely commented coolly, that once she returned to
 
     Smith's good graces with a scoop, "My real working life had begun."
        Elizabeth Banks clearly regarded her position as society editor as lesser in
 
       value than "straight" reporting. But she accepted it as her due.  Banks
 
   described her agonized decision when one unhappy actress poured out her woes
 
       to Banks (when male reporters were unable to get the story) and then
suddenly
 announced that her confession had been told to Banks, as a woman, in
 
 confidence, and that Banks must not publish anything about their conversation.
 Banks first replied that, as a woman with a living to earn, she must print
 
       it.  But the actress apparently convinced Banks that no woman should help
send
 another to ruination in a world already hard on woman.  "Promise that you
 
      will never for the sake of your own success tread on another woman and try
to
 
       crush her." Banks reluctantly promised.  The editor did not fire her, as
would
 have been the case, she suspected, had she been male.  Nonetheless, not
 
    surprisingly appalled by Banks' concession, the editor told Banks: "As you
are
 a woman, I will say that you have not the journalistic instinct.  You will
 
       never be able to do big things in journalism....The fact is, you're all
woman
 
       and no journalist."
        Banks agreed.  She stuck to the women's page and produced no more "special
 
       features," the exclusive preserve of "real" journalists.  Ironically,
much of
 
       the remainder of her autobiography, and the rest of her professional
life,
 
      Banks spent on/in England, where she was a tremendously successful
journalist,
 famous for her enterprising stories.  Based on a two-week stint as a maid,
 
       Banks produced a long series on the hardships of servant life;  she also
 
    became, albeit on false pretenses, a flower girl, a laundry worker, and a
 
     dressmaker's apprentice.
Ethics
        These women virtually echo one another in describing conflicts between their
 
       identities as reporters and their sensibilities as woman.  As Banks'
debate
 
       with the actress illustrated, these women primarily experienced their
sense of
 membership in a female sorority as undermining their professionalism.   Yet,
 
       ethical dilemmas were not always occasioned by loyalties to women.  In a
 
    chapter titled "Story of a Failure," Banks recalled why her editor sent her
to
 interview a Washington, D.C. diplomat:  "You've got diplomacy, tact,
 
 shrewdness, discretion, and above all, you are absolutely feminine, and you
 
       haven't got 'newspaper woman' and 'interviewer' placarded all over you"
(249).
  Whether it was because of Banks' femininity, the man, whom she knew from her
 days in Peru, spilled some important secrets whose publication would
 
 allegedly have damaged American interests.  Again, Banks agonized over the
 
      question: "Should she govern her womanhood and her honor by her
journalistic
 
       instinct, or should she govern that journalistic instinct by that honor
and
 
       that womanhood?" (256).  Ultimately, having stacked the deck against work
and
 
       having decided he had talked to her as a woman, not a reporter, Banks
merely
 
       told her editor the diplomat had refused to talk.
        In one highly sentimental chapter Banks presented the pitiful tale of a
 
    colleague who, as assigned, covered a funeral in a highly professional
manner,
 never telling anyone that the deceased was her fiancee.  Banks did not
 
   assume, however, that all women journalists would be guided by noble
feelings.
  Banks once received a marriage proposal through the mail from a reader who
 
       believed she really was living on $3 a week.  She speculated that some
women
 
       reporters would have obtained material for yet another story by
contacting the
 man but continuing to pose as a poor working girl.  She claimed she would not
 exploit her reader that way.
        A short story that Jordan published in Cosmopolitan and then included in a
 
       collection of fiction (1898), perhaps illustrated Jordan's approach to
ethics.
  Jordan's heroine, reporter Ruth Herrick, was assigned--because her managing
 
       editor realized no one else could do it--to interview a woman on trial
for m
 
       urder.  The defendant poured out her soul to Herrick, regaling her with
an
 
      awful tale of being cruelly abused by her husband, who she had poisoned,
after
 he attacked her mother. The reporter promised not to publish the pitiful
 
     confession of the dignified, regal, noble defendant, who eventually was
 
   acquitted.  Believing that Herrick simply failed to get the story, the
 
  managing editor asserted, "But, after all, you can't depend on a woman in this
 business."  Jordan's tale ended: "The managing editor was more nearly right
 
       than he knew" (1898, 29).
        Forty years later, in her autobiography, Jordan denied, despite widespread
 
       rumor to the contrary, that this story represented an autobiographical
 
  response to the real trial of Lizzie Borden.5  Even Jordan's own managing
 
     editor said, after reading the fiction, "So that's the kind of reporter you
 
       are."  According to her autobiography, when she told fellow newsman
Julian
 
      Ralph that she believed (as did many feminists of the day) in Borden's
innoc
 
       ence, her friend looked suddenly relieved.  With rare sarcasm, Banks
       commented: "All the newspaper men had been afraid that being a woman, and
 
     therefore without man's great natural sympathy, I would show a bias in my
 
     reports that might divert some of the current of popular feeling which was
 
      sweeping toward Miss Borden" (120-21).  The issue is not whether Jordan
based
 
       her story on Borden.  Rather, the point is whether Jordan--and her female
 
     colleagues--believed they should treat people as subjects, not objects.
 
    Apparently they did.
        Like Banks, Jordan was willing to forgo a good story for reasons of sympathy
 
       that she did not explicit mark as gendered.  Jordan once worked on a
story
 
      about a poor woman whose wealthy son-in-law would not help her, until
Jordan
 
       put the fear of God and the newspaper world into him.  She did not
publish the
 story, however. "Its withholding was the price of an aged gentlewoman's
 
    safety and comfort" (48).  Lowell reversed this story, self-critically
 
  confessing that she once volunteered to do a sensational, tabloid story about
 
       a young unmarried girl who had suffocated her baby.  Her editor told her
to
 
       drop the idea, and investigate instead homeless and jobless women.  The
 
   suggestion apparently inspired Lowell to undertake a number of disguises--
 
      dishwasher, charwoman, rag picker, taxi-dancer, and sweat shop worker--as
a
 
       way of investigating exploitation of poor girls.
MONEY
        All five autobiographers emphasized their financial worries.  In some sense,
 
       their anxieties  underscore the precarious financial status of all
journalists
 during this period.  But their adamancy on their need to support themselves
 
       suggests their determination to distance themselves from the image of
both
 
      frivolous society dilettantes and idealistic social reformers.  In a
society
 
       where work was increasingly paid in cash and status was correlated to
income,
 
       these women argued that they needed money and deserved to be paid no less
than
 men.  Once she realized the possibility of supporting herself with newspaper
 
       work (as a prelude to creative writing), Kelly explained: "I leaped to my
feet
 aglow with hope.  In that moment my newspaper career was born.  It was born
 
       out of economic necessity, and economic necessity kept it going until it
 
    ended" (121).  Kelly was consistently specific about how much (that is, how
 
       little) she was paid.  More to the point, she connected her ill-pay to
male
 
       prejudice.  For example, Kelly conceded that the $10 a San Francisco
editor
 
       once paid her was a lot of money in 1880--when she was desperate for
cash.
 
      "Nonetheless, I am very much inclined to think that if I had not been a
woman,
 young, inexperienced and not very prosperous in appearance, the smiling
 
    editor would have given me a larger order on the cashier" (129).
        Banks saw several potential conflicts between journalism and womanhood
 
   exacerbated by economics.  Having somewhat defensively explained both her
 
     reluctance to become a yellow journalist and her justification of yellow
 
    journalism, she added that not all women would succeed with sensational
 
   stories.  Moreover, although she both retained her self-respect and kept the
 
       "pot-aboiling" with exotic stories, she told editors not to assign her
 
  anything they wouldn't want their sisters to do.  She outright refused to let
 
       herself get arrested as a prostitute, for example, merely to dramatize
the
 
      need for reform.  On the other hand, although Banks' stories led to
certain
 
       institutional investigations (for example, of the practice of buying
British
 
       "pedigrees") and reforms, she took pains to point out that she was far
more
 
       concerned with earning a living than reform. Her autobiography frequent
 
   referred to money woes and her need to support herself.   Jordan also
 
 underlined her concern with money, after her father went down in the panic of
 
       1893.  "After years of regarding it as a trivial detail, the amount I
earned
 
       had suddenly become important" (105).  According to Lowell, she only
stooped
 
       to journalism because during the Depression she lost all the money earned
from
 her 1929 book.6
Romance and Domestic Life
        Kelly's autobiography is interesting both for the relatively little that she
 
       said about her personal life and for how she discussed the conflict
between
 
       personal and professional life. After Allen Kelly, an editorial writer
with
 
       whom she had worked at the Globe, proposed both a business partnership
and
 
      marriage, Florence Finch Kelly described fighting "the battle between love
and
 ambition."  Although as a "normal" woman, she said she certainly had expected
 marriage and motherhood, she assumed these would come in the distant future,
 
       "after the desires and ambitions of intellectual life had been at least
partly
 gratified."  In any event, after privately wrestling with her dilemma, she
 
       accepted Allen's proposal;  she recalled waving herself good-by in a
mirror
 
       before going to the small Globe ceremony (226).   In late 1885, she
resigned
 
       to have a child and did not resume regular professional work for several
 
    months.  In the choice between work and motherhood, she chose the latter.
 
      Being a "first-class Jersey cow" was important to her, she said, and
trying to
 write lessened her ability to produce enough good milk (232).
        Although Kelly explained her husband's frequent job changes, she offered no
 
       discussion of their relationship. Despite her philosophizing on many
issues,
 
       she said nothing about marriage, much less hers.  Kelly skipped over the
death
 of her first son and only occasionally mentioned her second "boykin," who
 
      apparently suffered serious health problems.  Eventually she chose to live
in
 
       New York City, for her son's sake.  Apparently her husband believed that
 
    California sunshine was good for his health, while she believed that colder
 
       weather was better for Sherwin.  Allen Kelly remained in Los Angeles
until his
 death, which she casually mentioned in one sentence (357).
        Banks was silent on the subject of her personal life, except for her maid and
 her dog. When her black maid decided to ignore Banks' protestations and
 
    return to her abusive husband, Banks expressed concern about Dinah's future
in
 Alabama.  Dinah's love for an unworthy man illustrated a problem that, in
 
      Banks' stated view, all women, black and white, shared.  Although her
 
 autobiography was dotted with references to men who proposed marriage out of
 
       professional chivalry, Banks never mentioned romantic possibilities or
 
  relationships.
        Jordan, who attended a convent high school and had considered becoming a nun
 
       (until her father begged her to try newspaper work instead), extensively
 
    discussed close, long-lasting friendships with men, including male reporters
 
       and writers, and women, including a number of reporters and writers, as
well
 
       as society women, social reformers, and activists.  One of her best
friends
 
       was a somewhat under-employed journalist who provided regular escort
service,
 
       especially to mass;  at her urging, he called her "Mother" and treated
her as
 
       such.  Jordan also openly speculated why she never fell in love with
Arthur
 
       Brisbane, journalism's "Napoleon," under whom she worked as assistant
Sunday
 
       editor of the World.  She supposed that much of the reason was her "basic
and
 
       lifelong prejudice against any combination of office work and sentimental
 
     dalliance--a prejudice Mr. Brisbane and other fine men I have worked with
 
     obviously shared" (128).
        One of Jordan's fictional tales concerned a woman who left the convent to go
 
       into journalism. (The advice a nun gave this character was precisely the
 
    advice Jordan received from a nun quoted in her autobiography.)  The
reporter
 
       found herself mislabeled after she volunteered for a somewhat sleazy
reporting
 assignment.  The reporter soon realized she had made a horrible mistake.
 
      Luckily, it seems, the paper's political editor offered her an alternative
 
      assignment: marry him.  And so, in "Miss Van Dyke's Best Story" the
reporter
 
       accepted:  "After all, a woman's place is in a home."  Like Banks, Jordan
 
     herself never married. For at least some 40 years she shared an apartment
with
 two women friends, with her mother a frequent guest.
Conclusion
        Jelinek (1980) asserts that women's autobiographies rarely mirror the
 
  establishment history of the times;  they deemphasize the public aspects of
 
       their lives, concentrating instead on domestic details, family
difficulties,
 
       close friends, and people who influenced them.  Mentioning
autobiographies by
 
       several women writers, she finds that even women famous as professionals
 
    referred only obliquely to their careers.  "This emphasis by women on the
 
     personal, especially on other people, rather than on their work life, their
 
       professional success, or their connectedness to current political or
       intellectual history clearly contradicts the established criterion about
the
 
       content of autonomy" (10).  Jane Marcus says the autobiographies of
certain
 
       privileged, successful women at the turn-of-the-century represent a
       "re/signing" of their names in women's history.  "Enacting a deliberate
 
   resignation from the public world and patriarchal history, which had already
 
       erased or was expected to erase their names and their works, they
re/signed
 
       their private lives into domestic discourse" (1988).
        This (re)turn to the personal does not seem apply to women journalists, who
 
       for the most part ruthlessly excised their personal life, or emphasized
that
 
       work required them to do so.  Gender is not necessarily and always the
 
  "hermeneutic key" to authorial intention and textual production (Peterson
 
     1993).  But the five autobiographies share certain features.  Consistent
with
 
       the era and the theorizing, these women were all close to their parents,
whom
 
       they regaraded as influential, especially mothers.  Kelly told mothers
 
  specifically not to worry if their children seemed not to appreciate their
 
      advice.  They also mentioned good friends--usually friends who were public
 
      figures and/or writers.  Nonetheless, these women, as reporters, focussed
on
 
       their careers, dedicated themselves to their work, and measured
themselves by
 
       male standards.  They varied in their modesty but they all underlined
their
 
       career ambition. Presumably Heilbrun would not find these women
particularly
 
       angry.  On the other hand, they announced their sense of injustice and
 
  inequity.  Ironically, Kelly, who was the most openly resentful, claimed that
 
       the re-living she experienced while drafting the book was more
satisfactory
 
       that the actual living, since it brought "ampler and serener tolerance of
 
     events and conditions and personalities that formerly had deeply disturbed
and
 perhaps irritated" (xv).
        While the stereotype insists that the mode of personal narrative is
       relatively introspective and intimate, these autobiographers generally
avoided
 emotional life, especially painful memories (cf. Jelinek 1980).  One might
 
       expect that women journalists in particular would avoid a female literary
 
     tradition.  More importantly, the exceptions to the rule are highly
       significant, especially as they elicit particular responses from critics
and
 
       readers and suggest the impact of publishers' decision-making, from how
 
   manuscripts are selected (or rejected) to how they are edited.  Only Milly
 
      Bennett was forthcoming about personal affairs, including relationships
with
 
       particular men.  Milly Bennett confessed that, as a seasoned reporter in
San
 
       Francisco, she covered fires just to be near the cub reporter she had
fallen
 
       in love with.  She followed him to Hawaii, where, as she described it,
she
 
      could not think straight for thinking about Mike Mitchell.  Bennett poured
out
 details about her despair at the eventual disintegration of her marriage.
 
       Bennett agonized over work and career choices, although at one point she
 
    claimed to prefer living hand-to-mouth while doing stories about Chiang
 
   Kai-shek to being trapped inside an apartment, sterilizing bottles.  Notably,
 
       Bennett's autobiography essentially did not get published.  Bennett
stopped
 
       working on her manuscript in 1939, apparently because no publisher was
 
  interested.  Moreover, Tom Grunfeld, who found her papers and published an
 
      annotated version of her autobiography in 1993, told Bennett's story
almost
 
       exclusively in sexual language.  Much of his introduction outlined her
three
 
       husbands (the second marriage was an unsuccessful attempt to protect a
 
  homosexual Soviet dancer;  the third husband, whom she met while covering the
 
       Spanish Civil War, died).  And Grunfeld himself highlighted how Bennett's
 
     friends apparently saw her embodying a "contradiction between her physical
 
      appearance and her strong emotional allure, and especially her strong
sexual
 
       attractiveness to men" (xv).7  Grunfeld recalled a newspaperman giving "a
wink
 that suggested Milly's charm lay not strictly in her ability to gather and
 
       write the news" (xv).
        Another angle on this emerges in Howard Good's treatment of  women
       autobiographers.  Of Joan Lowell's admittedly gory description of how a
 
   notorious "white slaver" literally attacked her during an under-cover
 
 investigation (he was eventually convicted for this attack), Good comments,
 
       "Sex gave her power over sources and readers, or at least the illusion of
it,
 
       but power...tends to corrupt.  Lowell was so corrupted--so lost in
       tabloidism--that even when she described herself being assaulted...she
was
 
      tempted to titillate" (1993, 92).  Good is much gentler on Jordan, whose
 
    autobiography was considerably more modest, self-deprecating, and critical
of
 
       women who would flaunt their sexuality.  Jordan described walking home
very
 
       late one night and being approached by a driver who tried to get her into
his
 
       cab.  She ran away in terror when inside the cab she saw a repulsive
       cadaverous-looking man staring back at her, his skin "indescribably
       horrible--yellow, with an undertone of green."  Good comments, "She was
still
 
       running years later" (85).
        In my view Jordan expressed healthy, valid satisfaction with career,
 
 religious commitment, and good friends--not fear of sex.  The point is that on
 one hand, these women's autobiographies have arisen, and continue to be
 
    judged, in terms of particular constructions of womanhood and particular
 
    notions about what is appropriate for female narrative.  And on the other
 
     hand, these women were clearly struggling to be heard on their own terms.
All
 five autobiographers addressed--both as warning and encouragement--women
 
     readers.  Neither as individuals nor as a group do they offer solutions to
the
 problems of being perceived as female in a male profession or to the problems
 of combining career and domestic responsibility.  By visibly struggling over
 
       these dilemmas, however, they dramatize the problems that women reporters
 
     confronted in the 1900-1940 period and also suggest the origins of a long
 
     tradition confronting, and perhaps even confining, women journalists years
 
      later.
 
 
 BIBLIOGRAPHYAnderson, Linda (1986). "At the Threshold of the Self: Women and
 
       Autobiography.  In Women's Writing: A Challenge to Theory. Moira
Monteith, ed.
 New York: St. Martin's Press.
 
Banks, Elizabeth L. (1902). The Autobiography of a 'Newspaper Girl.'  New
 
     York: Dodd, Mead.
 
Bennett, Milly (1993).  On Her Own. Journalistic Adventures from San Francisco
 to the Chinese Revolution, 1917-1927.  A. Tom Grunfeld, ed. Armonk, NY: M.E.
 
       Sharpe.
 
Conway, Jill Ker, ed. (1992). Written by Herself.  New York: Vintage, 1992.
 
Folkenflik, Robert, ed. (1993). The Culture of Autobiography: Constructions of
 Self-Representation. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
 
Friedman, Susan Stanford (1988). "Women's Autobiographical Selves: Theory and
 
       Practice."  In Shari Benstock, ed.  The Private Self. Theory and Practice
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       Women's Autobiographical Writings. Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina
 
       Press.
 
Glenn, Cheryl (1992).  "Author, Audience, and Autobiography: Rhetorical
 
   Technique in The Book of Margery Kempe.  College English, 54:5, pp. 540-553.
 
Good, Howard (1993). The Journalist as Autobiographer. Metuchen: Scarecrow
 
      Press.
 
Heilbrun, Carolyn G. (1988). Writing a Woman's Life. New York: W. W. Norton.
 
"Joan Lowell is Dead in Brazil; Author and Adventure Seeker." New York Times.
 
       Nov. 15, 1967, p. 47.
 
Jelinek, Estelle C. (1980). "Introduction: Women's Autobiography and the Male
 
       Tradition." In Estelle C. Jelinek, ed.,  Women's Autobiography: Essays in
 
     Criticism.  Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
 
Jordan, Elizabeth (1898). Tales of the City Room.  New York: Charles
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Jordan, Elizabeth (1938). Three Rousing Cheers. New York: D. Appleton-Century.
 
Kelly, Florence Finch (1939).  Flowing Stream.  The Story of Fifty-Six Years
 
       in American Newspaper Life.  New York: E.P. Dutton.
 
Lowell, Joan (1933).  Gal Reporter.  New York: Farrar & Rinehart.
 
Marcus, Jane (1988). "Invincible Mediocrity:  The Private Selves of Public
 
      Women."  In Shari Benstock, ed.  The Private Self. Theory and Practice of
 
     Women's Autobiographical Writings. Chapel Hill: University of North
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       Press.
 
Mason, Mary G. (1980). "The Other Voice:  Autobiographies of Women Writers."
 
       In James Olney, ed. Autobiography:  Essays Theoretical and Critical.
 
 Princeton: Princeton University Press.
 
Peterson, Linda J. (1993). "Institutionalizing Women's Autobiography:
 
 Nineteenth-Century Editors and the Shaping of an Autobiographical Tradition."
 
       In Robert Folkenflik, ed. The Culture of Autobiography: Constructions of
 
    Self-Representation.  Stanford: Stanford University Press.
 
Solomon, Martha (1991). "Autobiographies as Theorical Narratives: Elizabeth
 
       Cady Stanton and Anna Howard Shaw as 'New Women.'"  Communication
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      42:4, pp. 354-70.
 
Spacks, Patricia (1976). Imagining a Self. Cambridge: Harvard University
 
    Press.
 
Spacks, Patricia (1980). "Selves in Hiding." In  Estelle C. Jelinek, ed.
 
    Women's Autobiography: Essays in Criticism.  Bloomington: Indiana University
 
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Stanton, Domna C. (1984). "Autogynography: Is the Subject Different?" In The
 
       Female Autograph, Domna Stanton, ed. New York: New York Literary Forum.
 
Winston, Elizabeth (1980). " The Autobiographer and Her Readers: From Apology
 
       to Affirmation."  In  Estelle C. Jelinek, ed. Women's Autobiography:
Essays in
 Criticism.  Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
 
 

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