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Women in Magazines
DOI link for Women in Magazines
Women in Magazines book
Women in Magazines
DOI link for Women in Magazines
Women in Magazines book
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ABSTRACT
Women have been important contributors to and readers of magazines since the development of the periodical press in the nineteenth century. By the mid-twentieth century, millions of women read the weeklies and monthlies that focused on supposedly "feminine concerns" of the home, family and appearance. In the decades that followed, feminist scholars criticized such publications as at best conservative and at worst regressive in their treatment of gender norms and ideals. However, this perspective obscures the heterogeneity of the magazine industry itself and women’s experiences of it, both as readers and as journalists. This collection explores such diversity, highlighting the differing and at times contradictory images and understandings of women in a range of magazines and women’s contributions to magazines in a number of contexts from late nineteenth century publications to twenty-first century titles in Britain, North America, continental Europe and Australia.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Thinking About Women’s Magazines
chapter 1|15 pages
Fragmentation and Inclusivity: Methods for Working with Girls’ and Women’s Magazines
chapter 2|13 pages
Landscape for a Good Woman’s Weekly: Finding Magazines in Post-war British History and Culture
part |2 pages
Part II Ideals of Femininity and Negotiating Gender Norms
chapter 3|11 pages
Gender, Reproduction and the Fight for Free Love in the Late Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press
chapter 4|15 pages
Inter-war Czech Women’s Magazines: Constructing Gender, Consumer Culture and Identity in Central Europe
chapter 5|11 pages
Make Any Occasion a Special Event: Hospitality, Domesticity and Female Cordial Consumption in Magazine Advertising, 1950–1969
chapter 6|13 pages
Righting Women in the 1960s: Gender, Power and Conservatism in the Pages of The New Guard
part |2 pages
Part III Women, Magazines and Employment
chapter 7|18 pages
Getting a Living, Getting a Life: Leonora Eyles, Employment and Agony, 1925–1930
chapter 8|12 pages
8 ‘Corresponding with Men’: Exploring the Significance of Constance Maynard’s Magazine Writing, 1913–1920
chapter 10|15 pages
Nanny Knows Best?: Tensions in Nanny Employment in Early and Mid-Twentieth-Century British Childcare Magazines
part |2 pages
Part IV Young Women in Magazines
chapter 11|18 pages
The American Girl: Ideas of Nationalism and Sexuality as Promoted in the Ladies’ Home Journal during the Early Twentieth Century
part |2 pages
Part V Women’s Bodies from Second Wave Feminism to the Twenty-First Century