This article examines the work of Alma Whitaker—feminist, reporter, and columnist for the Los Angeles Times from 1910 to 1944. Widely known in her time but almost totally forgotten today, Whitaker’s work illustrates the formative role of newspaperwomen in the expansion of Los Angeles in the early twentieth century, and specifically in promoting a settler fantasy that redefined notions of white women’s selfhood in the frontier space of Los Angeles. Her popular articles and columns both bolstered the white settler campaign to create Los Angeles as a white settlement and challenged patriarchal norms. Situating Whitaker within the emergence of the mass-circulating urban newspaper industry and the colonization of Los Angeles, this article contributes to the fields of women/gender history, hegemonic feminism, borderlands/California, and recent scholarship on settler colonialism as a framework for understanding U.S. history.
“Flipping the Script”: Alma Whitaker, Newspaperwomen, and the Settler Fantasy in Los Angeles Available to Purchase
JULIE COHEN is an adjunct professor of history at Cal State Los Angeles, a research affiliate at the Center for the Study of Women at UCLA, and an Instructional Technologist at Loyola Marymount University. She holds a PhD in history from UC Irvine. Her academic interests include California, the U.S. West, women, gender, and race in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century United States. She has received multiple grants and awards, including a doctoral dissertation fellowship from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation and a California Studies Initiative Grant from the UC Humanities Research Institute. She is currently working on a history of California newspaperwomen in the early twentieth century.
Julie Cohen; “Flipping the Script”: Alma Whitaker, Newspaperwomen, and the Settler Fantasy in Los Angeles. California History 1 February 2023; 100 (1): 27–55. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/ch.2023.100.1.27
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