Bernays, Doris Fleischman, 1892-1980
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person
Bernays, Doris Fleischman, 1892-1980
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Name :
Bernays, Doris Fleischman, 1892-1980
Bernays, Doris Fleischman, 1891-
Name Components
Name :
Bernays, Doris Fleischman, 1891-
Fleischman, Doris
Name Components
Name :
Fleischman, Doris
Fleischman, Doris Elsa 1892-1980
Name Components
Name :
Fleischman, Doris Elsa 1892-1980
Fleischman, Doris E., 1892-1980
Name Components
Name :
Fleischman, Doris E., 1892-1980
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Biographical History
Author, editor, feminist, and public relations consultant, Doris Fleischman Bernays (1892-1980) was born in New York City, the daughter of Samuel and Harriet (Rosenthal) Fleischman. After graduating from Barnard College (1913), she worked for the New York Tribune as a reporter, and then successively as assistant woman's page editor and assistant Sunday editor. In 1919 she joined her future husband, Edward L. Bernays, in his new public relations firm in New York. It was largely through their pioneering efforts that the principles, practices, and ethics of the new profession of public relations were established. They were married in 1922, and had two daughters. She died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1980.
Editor of An Outline of Careers for Women (1919), and contributor to America As Americans See It (1932), and to Varied Harvest (1953), Bernays was also the author of A Wife Is Many Women (1955). She was vice-president of the Edward L. Bernays Foundation, president of the Women Pays Club, vice-president of the Lucy Stone League, and member of Women in Communications, Inc.
Author, editor, feminist, and public relations consultant, Doris Fleischman Bernays (1892-1980) was born in New York City, the daughter of Samuel and Harriet (Rosenthal) Fleischman. After graduating from Barnard College (1913), she worked for the New York Tribune as a reporter, and then successively as assistant woman's page editor and assistant Sunday editor. In 1919 she joined her future husabnd, Edward L. Bernays, in his new public relations firm in New York. It was largely through their pioneering efforts that the principles, practices, and ethics of the new profession of public relations were established. They were married in 1922, and had two daughters. She died in Cambridge, Mass., in 1980.
Editor of An Outline of Careers for Women (1919), and contributor to America As Americans See It (1932), and to Varied Harvest (1953), Bernays was also the author of A Wife Is Many Women (1955). She was vice-president of the Edward L. Bernays Foundation, president of the Women Pays Club, vice-president of the Lucy Stone League, and member of Women in Communications, Inc.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/86030155
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q5297930
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79059980
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79059980
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Women authors, American
Businesswomen
Equal pay for equal work
Feminism
Household employees
Marriage
Married women
Women poets
Public relations
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Women
Women
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>