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Margaret Bourke-White broke down gender barriers and was the first female journalist to work in combat zones during WWII FOR decades, Margaret Bourke-White travelled the world documenting life at ...
In 1942, LIFE Magazine sent Margaret Bourke-White, one of its four original staff photographers and the first female photojournalist accredited to cover WWII, to take pictures of the VIII Bomber ...
At the very real risk of belaboring the obvious, we’ll gladly state at the outset that one photo gallery can not, and will not, even begin to encompass Margaret Bourke-White’s achievements as ...
There were hundreds of pictures by well-known photojournalists such as Life's Margaret Bourke-White and Robert Capa ... her recent finds were shown in the "WWII Photographic Perspectives ...
Margaret Bourke-White (American, June 14, 1904–August 27, 1971) was a documentary photographer and a photojournalist. Bourke-White is best known as the first female war correspondent and the first to ...
Taken by the pioneering female photojournalist Margaret Bourke-White, "At the time of the Louisville Flood" shows Black residents lined up outside a flood relief agency. Behind them is a mural ...
New York-born Margaret decided ... Remarkably, Bourke-White was the first ever female war correspondent, and also the first woman to be allowed to work in combat zones in WWII.
Margaret Bourke-White's photograph "At the time of the Louisville Flood" contrasts the idealized American Dream with the economic hardships many faced during the Great Depression. Bourke-White's ...