Settling

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A01=Ashley Walter
archival recovery of women's movements
Author_Ashley Walter
breaking gender barriers in American media
broadening who is newsworthy in journalism
Category=JBCT4
Category=JBSF1
Category=KNTP2
Category=NHTB
Civil Rights Act and women's liberation movement
collective action by women workers
collective resistance to workplace inequity
courageous newswomen changing norms
employment discrimination litigation
empowerment through legal action
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
female journalists fighting for equality
feminist history of work
feminist intervention in public narratives
feminist legal history
feminist media history
feminist organizing strategies
feminist perspectives on press power
feminist resistance in professional spaces
feminist responses to exclusion
forthcoming
gender and authority in news media
gender bias in media industries
gender segregation in US media
hidden history of newsroom gender bias
historical recovery of suppressed narratives
history of women in journalism
history of women's employment rights
history of workplace lawsuits
journalism and social change
journalism as a site of social struggle
journalism history and women's rights
journalism's transformation through activism
labor organizing among journalists
lasting legacy of gender equality lawsuits
legal activism in publishing
legal battles at The New York Times and Associated Press
lessons from past gender equity struggles.
litigation sparking social change
media accountability movements
media institutions and power
media labor activism
media representation and gender
news organizations and workplace discrimination
newsroom activism and collective action
newsroom gender equity struggles
newsroom labor politics
oral histories of media discrimination
oral history of women professionals
press industry labor history
professional advancement barriers
professional barriers for women
Reader's Digest and Newsweek legal battles
reports on women workers and leaders
rewriting women's roles in the press
second-wave feminism and media
sex discrimination lawsuits in journalism
sexism in media workplaces
shifting balance of power in media
testimonies and risks for equality
transformative impact on public life
U.S. labor law and gender justice
women as leaders and sources in the news
women asserting leadership in media
women challenging corporate culture
women challenging newsroom inequality
women editors and reporters in major outlets
women expanding definitions of newsworthiness
women in journalism history
women reporters and editors
women reshaping media coverage
women reshaping public discourse
women transforming male-dominated fields
women's class action lawsuits in newsrooms
women-led institutional reform
workplace equality movements
workplace rights in the 1970s

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349859
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A history of courage and collective action inside the most powerful newsrooms in America

In 1971, Susan Smith, a young researcher at Reader's Digest, dared to imagine herself as an editor. Her ambition was swiftly dismissed by a hiring manager who told her, "Single girls just don't do well in this job." Crushed—and then furious—Smith sought out Harriet Rabb, the attorney who had successfully sued Newsweek for sex discrimination just a year earlier. Their meeting helped spark a class-action lawsuit that ultimately united two thousand women at the magazine and became part of a broader revolt inside American newsrooms. Smith's experience was far from unique. For much of American history, journalism has been rigidly segregated by gender, with women confined to research, clerical work, or the "women's pages," while men dominated reporting, editing, and leadership. That system began to crack in the 1970s, as the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the women's liberation movement emboldened newswomen to challenge daily discrimination. Yet this development has remained largely hidden, buried by editors reluctant to document inequities within their own institutions. Settling recovers this lost story.

Tracing class-action sex discrimination lawsuits at some of the most powerful news organizations in the United States—including The Washington Post, the Associated Press, The New York Times, and Time—Ashley Walter draws on oral histories and long-forgotten documents to reconstruct legal battles at eight major outlets. She argues that meaningful change came not from institutional goodwill but from the courage of women who organized, testified, and risked their careers to demand equality. Their victories reshaped journalism itself. As women assumed reporting and editorial roles, they broadened the scope of who counted as newsworthy, covering women as workers, political leaders, and authoritative sources. With this new illumination of women's full participation in public life, newswomen shifted social norms and helped build women's power across American society. By recovering these accounts, Settling reveals how newsroom struggles for gender equality transformed both journalism and the nation, offering urgent lessons for our present moment.

Ashley Walter is an assistant professor of journalism and media at Saint Louis University.

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