Miloch
July 14th 17, 03:23 PM
http://jezebel.com/amelia-earhart-had-the-new-york-times-stop-calling-her-1796909075
Adding to the mountains of Amelia Earhart flotsam and jetsam which washes up
year after year (especially this year, with new investigations involving
forensic dogs, satellite imagery, and the History Channel), David Dunlap at the
New York Times has unearthed an old letter to the publisher from Amelia Earhart,
who’d asked that the paper stop referring to her by her husband’s name. And now,
we know her as Amelia Earhart.
It doesn’t exactly sound like a statement about a woman’s right to not be
identified by her marital status, but more along the lines of a woman’s right to
be identified as a Sasha Fierce:
"I admit I have no principle to uphold in asking that I be called by my
professional name in print. However, it is for many reasons more convenient for
both of us to be simply ‘Amelia Earhart.’ After all (here may be a principle) I
believe flyers should be permitted the same privileges as writers or actresses.
She still found her husband’s name “grand” for “social purposes,” she wrote.
(Her husband came from a famous publishing family). The paper did indeed honor
her request, and it probably helped that they were friends, or friendly enough
for her to hit them up for money when she was abroad and needed a loan.
You get it girl.
*
Adding to the mountains of Amelia Earhart flotsam and jetsam which washes up
year after year (especially this year, with new investigations involving
forensic dogs, satellite imagery, and the History Channel), David Dunlap at the
New York Times has unearthed an old letter to the publisher from Amelia Earhart,
who’d asked that the paper stop referring to her by her husband’s name. And now,
we know her as Amelia Earhart.
It doesn’t exactly sound like a statement about a woman’s right to not be
identified by her marital status, but more along the lines of a woman’s right to
be identified as a Sasha Fierce:
"I admit I have no principle to uphold in asking that I be called by my
professional name in print. However, it is for many reasons more convenient for
both of us to be simply ‘Amelia Earhart.’ After all (here may be a principle) I
believe flyers should be permitted the same privileges as writers or actresses.
She still found her husband’s name “grand” for “social purposes,” she wrote.
(Her husband came from a famous publishing family). The paper did indeed honor
her request, and it probably helped that they were friends, or friendly enough
for her to hit them up for money when she was abroad and needed a loan.
You get it girl.
*