ABSTRACT

Displaying Women explores the role of women in the representation of leisure in turn-of-the-century New York. To see and be seen--on Fifth Avenue and Broadway, in Central Park, and in the fashionable uptown hotels and restaurants--was one of the fundamental principles in the display aesthetic of New York's fashionable society.

Maureen E. Montgomery argues for a reconsideration of the role of women in the bourgeois elite in turn-of-the-century America. By contrasting multiple images of women drawn from newspapers, magazines, private correspondence, etiquette manuals and the New York fiction of Edith Wharton, Henry James and others, she offers a convincing antidote to the long-standing tendency in women's history to overlook women whose class affiliations have put them in a position of power.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

1 The Social Calendar

chapter 2|23 pages

2 The Female World of Ritual and Etiquette

chapter 3|26 pages

3 Interiors and Façades

chapter 4|29 pages

4 Women Abroad

chapter 5|24 pages

5 “Optical Excursions”

chapter 6|22 pages

6 Women in the Public Eye

chapter |7 pages

Spectacle and Surveillance