3.5: Gender and Racial Gaps
- Page ID
- 155232
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Introduction
For much of journalism’s history in the U.S., women were seen largely as a market for news, rather than as a community that should be reflected in the news. Put another way, they were generally seen as consumers of news and not worthwhile subjects of it. Moreover, women’s pathways into journalism were generally limited, with journalism being a primarily male profession for much of its history in the U.S. (and much of the world).