Eleanor Roosevelt and radio in early Cold War France
Publication date
2019-04-09
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Abstract
The American First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was a prolific writer, public speaker and broadcaster. She appeared on her own radio programs in the 1930s, 40s and 50s and those of others, both in the US and abroad. In many of her daily newspaper columns over the years, Mrs. Roosevelt spoke of the importance of international radio and seemed to suggest there was a unique role for the medium as a way to reach ordinary men and women. Of the Voice of America, she said it played a vital role in spreading understanding of the American way of life and American democracy. This paper looks at American broadcasting to France in the early Cold War and considers two broadcasts Mrs. Roosevelt made while in France with the United Nations: a 1948 episode of the program Changement de Decors and a series of weekly talks about the UN for the French service in 1951–52.
Keywords
Roosevelt, diplomacy, broadcasting history, General Social Sciences
Citation
Luscombe-Serlie, A 2019, 'Eleanor Roosevelt and radio in early Cold War France', Women's History Review. https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2019.1600646