Hispanic and Latino American women in journalism

Hispanic and Latino women in America have been involved in journalism for years, using their multilingual skills to reach across cultures and spread news throughout the 19th century until the common era. Hispanic presses provided information important to the Hispanic and Latin American communities and helped to foster and preserve the cultural values that remain today. These presses also "promoted education, provided special-interest columns, and often founded magazines, publishing houses, and bookstores to disseminate the ideas of local and external writers."[1]

Early 20th century

During the early twentieth century several women along the Texas-Mexican border in Laredo were instrumental in spreading word about their concern for the civil rights of Mexicans and disdain for then dictator, Porfirio Díaz, through their writing in Hispanic newspapers.

Jovita Idar, a teacher in Ojuelos, began to write for her father's newspaper, La Crónica.[2] In 1910 Jovita's family led the organization of the first Mexican Congress in Texas to protect Mexican-American rights and helped to found La Liga Femenil Mexicana, a women's organization led by Idar herself focusing on education reform.[3][4] At the same time another educator, Leonor Villegas de Magnón, began to write for covert revolutionary publications.[5] Villegas "rejected both the ideals of the aristocratic class and the traditional role assigned to women in Mexican society."[6] After moving to Laredo, she began to write for a local newspaper and became a member of Junta Revolutionaria. Villegras and Idar both worked together in La Cruz Blanca, a small organization that helped wounded soldiers which Villegras founded and financed.[5] As a result, Villegas wrote about the experiences of the nurses and people of Juárez in The Rebel, which was not published until 1994 by Arte Público Press.

Sara Estela Ramírez was an educator who joined Partido Liberal Mexicano, a progressive Mexican political party that consisted of mainly men. Ramírez had her writing published in La Crónica and another Hispanic newspaper, El Democrata Fronterizo, including two of her own self-publications, La Corregidora and Aurora. Ramírez's most popular work was Rise Up!, a poem urging "readers to look beyond traditional definitions of woman’s place [...] It (urged) women to look beyond their role as passive and supportive, finding meaning and action within domestic tasks."[7][8] During this time, Colombian born Blanca de Moncaleano was also working on Pluma Roja an anarchist newspaper based in Los Angeles that contained articles targeted toward women and challenged them to increase their knowledge to create an egalitarian society.[9]

1960-1980

Later, during the Chicano Movement, feminist Anna Nieto-Gómez helped to found a student Chicana newspaper, Hijas de Cuauhtémoc,[1] at California State University in Long Beach and "called for a critical view of sexism, citing its presence in Chicano families, in communities, and within the male-dominated Chicano movement."[10] Through Nieto-Gómez's writing she pointed out what she called "maternal chauvinism" and her views about women and stereotypes about them in the Chicano culture.[11] During this period Francisca Flores, another women's rights activist, began writing for La Luz Magazine and Mas Grafíca. Like Nieto-Gómez, Flores found certain elements of the Chicano movement to be sexist and supported rights for Chicano women.[1] Flores wrote about her opinions on women's rights in her own magazine, Regeneración and founded the Comisión Femenil Mexicana Nacional.

1980-2010

In 1982, while writing for the Washington Post, Alma Guillermoprieto broke the story of the El Mozote massacre in spite of incredible risk to her life, where Salvadoran armed forces killed hundreds of people who were thought to be guerrilla sympathizers.[12] Guillermoprieto would go on to write for Newsweek and The New Yorker, reporting on subjects in South America.

Marie Arana (born in Lima, Peru and educated in the U.S.) joined the Washington Post in 1992. She became Deputy Editor of Book World in 1993 and Editor in Chief of the section in 1999. She also wrote feature pieces on books, Hispanics, and diversity for other sections of the newspaper, including the front page. She retired from Editor of Book World to become the Washington Post's Writer at Large in 2009. She has written a series of Op-Ed columns on Latin America for the New York Times.

In the early 1990s Achy Obejas, a Cuban immigrate who grew up in Indiana, started writing for the Chicago Tribune, Latina, POZ, The Advocate, and reported on high-profile stories such as the Gianni Versace and Matthew Shepard murders. While writing for the Chicago Tribune in 2001, Obejas and her team were eventually awarded a Pulitzer Prize for their work on "Gateway to Gridlock," an article on the American air traffic system.[13] In her writing Obejas was able to detail her experiences as a lesbian, Jewish, and Cuban immigrant in her fiction and short story collections throughout the nineties.[3] With her novel Memory Mambo, Obejas explored the life of a conflicted Cuban American lesbian and won a Lambda Literary Award for her story.

Presence in journalism

In 2002 33% of journalists were women. Among Hispanic and Latino journalists (3.3% total), 46.2% were women.[14]

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See also

References

  1. Ruiz, V. (2006). Latinas in the United States: a historical encyclopedia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 353. ISBN 978-0-253-34681-0.
  2. Handbook of Texas Online - Idar, Jovita. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fid03. Retrieved on July 28, 2011.
  3. Kanellos, N.; et al. (2003). Herencia: the anthology of Hispanic literature of the United States. New York: Oxford University of Press. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-19-513825-2.
  4. Villegas, L. et al. (1994). The rebel. Houston: Arte Público PressMagnón, Leonor Villegas de (1994). The Rebel (Recovering the Us Hispanic Literary Heritage). ISBN 978-1-55885-056-9. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  5. "Great Texas Women". Austin: University of Texas. Retrieved 28 July 2011.
  6. Arrizón, A. (1998). "'Soldaderas' and the Staging of the Mexican Revolution". TDR. 48 (1): 90–112. doi:10.1162/105420498760308698. JSTOR 1146648.
  7. Enoch, Jessica (2008). Refiguring rhetorical education: women teaching African American, Native American, and Chicanoa students, 1865-1911. Illinois: Southern Illinois Univ Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-2835-2.
  8. Johnson, K. (April 26, 2010). Adventures in feministory: Sara Estela Ramírez. Bitch, Retrieved from http://bitchmagazine.org/post/adventures-in-feministory-sara-estela-ram%C3%ADrez
  9. Ramón A. Gutiérrez, Genaro M. Padilla, ed. (1993). Recovering the U.S. Hispanic literary heritage. Austin: Arte Público Press. ISBN 978-1-55885-058-3. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  10. Hernández, Ellie D. (2009). Postnationalism in Chicanao literature and culture. Austin: Univ of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71907-1. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  11. Alma M. Garcia (1997). Chicana feminist thought: the basic historical writings. New York: Routledge. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-415-91800-8.
  12. "The O.A.S. to Reopen Inquiry Into Massacre in El Salvador in 1981". New York: New York Times. 2005. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  13. "The Pulitzer Prizes Explanatory Reporting". New York: Columbia University. 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  14. Weaver, David H.; Wilhoit, G. Cleveland; Voakes, Paul S.; Beam, Randal A.; Brownlee, Bonnie J. (2007). The American journalist in the 21st century: U.S. news people at the dawn of a new millennium. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN 978-0-8058-5382-7. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
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