If just perusing the pages of a resume`, Clare Booth Luce is not a woman one would consider to make the leap from high fashion photography to the front lines of battle. Known more as a socialite, first elected congresswoman of Connecticut (1942-1946), playwright, and U.S. ambassador to Italy ("Women Come to the Front", 2014), Clare became successful in the relaying of information from the battlefields to the breakfast table through publishing of books and editorials. Similar to Clare 's strengths are those of May Craig. May became a woman in a leadership role for the Women 's National Press Club and Eleanor Roosevelt 's Press Conference Association and responsible for the advancement of women in journalism in the professional arena ("Women Come to the Front", 2014). While these two women have a part in international photographic documentation of war, Dorthea Lange became a more influential presence on the home front as a documentary photographer, beginning during the Great Depression. Dorthea felt cataloging American citizens suffering from ethnic disparities and displacement of workers was of utmost importance.
Faced with civil and racial atrocities after the development of Japanese-American Imprisonment camps, Dorthea found herself facing an internal struggle and externally with her
References: Morris, S. J. (1997) Rage for Fame. New York, NY: Random House Library of Congress website: http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/wcf/wcf0010.html Women Come to the Front. (2014, January 1). Retrieved September 21, 2014.