Print media have been used throughout the twentieth century to promote social and political activism. At a time when the golden age of print appears to be ending, Modern Print Activism in the United States argues that print activism should be studied as a specifically modernist phenomenon and poses questions related to the efficacy of print as a vehicle for social and political change.
Print media have been used throughout the twentieth century to promote social and political activism. At a time when the golden age of print appears to be ending, Modern Print Activism in the United States argues that print activism should be studied as a specifically modernist phenomenon and poses questions related to the efficacy of print as a vehicle for social and political change.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Rachel Schreiber is Dean and Vice President for Academic Affairs at the San Francisco Art Institute, California, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction; Chapter 1 Print Culture and the Construction of Radical Identity: Juliet H. Severance and the Reform Press in Late Nineteenth-Century America, Joanne E. Passet; Chapter 2 Changing Feelings: Fallen Women, Sentimentality, and the Activist Press, María Carla Sánchez; Chapter 3 "She Will Spike War's Gun": The Anti-War Graphic Satire of the American Suffrage Press, Rachel Schreiber; Chapter 4 Publishing a "Fighting Spirit": Marianne Moore in the Little Magazines During WWI, Nikolaus Wasmoen1Permission for the use of the lines from "The Fish," as found in folder I:02:04 of the Marianne Moore Collection, located at the Rosenbach Museum and Library, is granted by David M. Moore, Esquire, Administrator of the Literary Estate of Marianne Moore. All rights reserved. Unpublished letters by Hilda Doolittle (H.D.): Copyright 2012 by The Schaffner Family Foundation. Used by permission; Chapter 5 Holiday Activism: Good Housekeeping and the Meaning of Mother's Day, Katharine Antolini; Chapter 6 "Give this copy of the Kourier magazine to your friend. You will help him. You will also help society":1920s KKK Print, Propaganda, and Publicity, Craig Fox; Chapter 7 Productive Fiction and Propaganda: The Development and Uses of Communist Party Pamphlet Literature, Trevor Joy Sangrey; Chapter 8 Containment Culture: The Cold War in the Ladies' Home Journal, 1946-1959, Diana Cucuz; Chapter 9 Challenging the Anti-Pleasure League: Physique Pictorial and the Cultivation of Gay Politics, Whitney Strub; Chapter 10 Calendar Art: How the 1968 SNCC Wall Calendar Brought Activism Indoors, Lián Amaris; Chapter 11 Amazon Quarterly: Pre-Zine Print Culture and the Politics of Separatism, Tirza True Latimer; Chapter 12 Crafting Public Cultures in Feminist Periodicals, Elizabeth Groeneveld;
Introduction; Chapter 1 Print Culture and the Construction of Radical Identity: Juliet H. Severance and the Reform Press in Late Nineteenth-Century America, Joanne E. Passet; Chapter 2 Changing Feelings: Fallen Women, Sentimentality, and the Activist Press, María Carla Sánchez; Chapter 3 "She Will Spike War's Gun": The Anti-War Graphic Satire of the American Suffrage Press, Rachel Schreiber; Chapter 4 Publishing a "Fighting Spirit": Marianne Moore in the Little Magazines During WWI, Nikolaus Wasmoen1Permission for the use of the lines from "The Fish," as found in folder I:02:04 of the Marianne Moore Collection, located at the Rosenbach Museum and Library, is granted by David M. Moore, Esquire, Administrator of the Literary Estate of Marianne Moore. All rights reserved. Unpublished letters by Hilda Doolittle (H.D.): Copyright 2012 by The Schaffner Family Foundation. Used by permission; Chapter 5 Holiday Activism: Good Housekeeping and the Meaning of Mother's Day, Katharine Antolini; Chapter 6 "Give this copy of the Kourier magazine to your friend. You will help him. You will also help society":1920s KKK Print, Propaganda, and Publicity, Craig Fox; Chapter 7 Productive Fiction and Propaganda: The Development and Uses of Communist Party Pamphlet Literature, Trevor Joy Sangrey; Chapter 8 Containment Culture: The Cold War in the Ladies' Home Journal, 1946-1959, Diana Cucuz; Chapter 9 Challenging the Anti-Pleasure League: Physique Pictorial and the Cultivation of Gay Politics, Whitney Strub; Chapter 10 Calendar Art: How the 1968 SNCC Wall Calendar Brought Activism Indoors, Lián Amaris; Chapter 11 Amazon Quarterly: Pre-Zine Print Culture and the Politics of Separatism, Tirza True Latimer; Chapter 12 Crafting Public Cultures in Feminist Periodicals, Elizabeth Groeneveld;
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