This study investigates the experiences of women journalists during the
last phase of Namibia's liberation struggle against South African rule.
Black or white, women journalists in Namibia made significant
contributions to the liberation cause -including the founding of a
high-profiled newspaper -whilst others worked for media sympathetic to
the apartheid government. Based on interviews and deploying feminist
media theory, Maria Mboono Nghidinwa pays close attention to the
gendered power relationships in the newsrooms of newspapers and radio
stations at the time. She looks at the intense political intimidations
which targeted women and, in particular, the constraints experienced by
black women journalists.