*APPROVED* 'This book is essential and exciting reading for all interested in the history of women in the inter-war period; an inter-disciplinary collection which explores a wide range of women's magazines including some like Eve, Britannia and Labour Women which are all too often neglected.' Maggie Andrews, University of Worcester Provides new perspectives on women's print media in interwar Britain This collection of 30 new essays recovers and explores a neglected archive of women's print media and dispels the myth of the interwar decades as a retreat to 'home and duty' for women. The volume…mehr
Catherine Clay is Senior Lecturer in English at Nottingham Trent University. She is author of British Women Writers 1914-1945: Professional Work and Friendship (Ashgate, 2006) and has published articles and book chapters on interwar women's writing and women's journalism. Her new monograph, Time and Tide: the Feminist and Cultural Politics of a Modern Magazine, is forthcoming with Edinburgh University Press. Maria DiCenzo is Professor of English at Wilfrid Laurier University. She has published on the British suffrage press in journals such as Media History and Women's History Review. She co-edited Feminism and the Periodical Press, 1900-1918 (Routledge, 2005) and authored Feminist Media History: Suffrage, Periodicals and the Public Sphere (Palgrave, 2011) with Lucy Delap and Leila Ryan. Her current research examines British and international feminist activism and periodicals in the interwar period. Barbara Green is Associate Professor of English and Concurrent Professor in Gender Studies at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of Spectacular Confessions: Autobiography, Performative Activism, and the Sites of Suffrage (Palgrave, 1997), the forthcoming, Feminist Periodicals and Daily Life: Women and Modernity in British Culture and co-editor of the Journal of Modern Periodical Studies. Fiona Hackney is Professor in Fashion and Textiles Theories at Wolverhampton University. Her forthcoming monograph Women's Magazines and the Feminine Imagination: Opening up a New World for Women in Interwar Britain will be published by I.B.Tauris. She has published widely on women, design, and the decorative arts, and is Principal Investigator on a number of Arts and Humanities Research Council projects exploring the value of creative making and maker spaces as a means of community engagement.
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General Introduction Catherine Clay Maria DiCenzo Barbara Green and Fiona Hackney; Part I: Culture and the Modern Woman; Introduction Catherine Clay; 1. "Tricks of Aspect and the Varied Gifts of Daylight": Representations of Books and Reading in Interwar Women's Periodicals Claire Battershill; 2. "A Journal of the Period": Modernism and Conservative Modernity in Eve: The Lady's Pictorial (1919-1929) Vike Martina Plock; 3. Sketching Out America's Jazz Age in British Vogue Natalie Kalich; 4. Clemence Dane's Literary Criticism for Good Housekeeping: Cultivating a "Small Comical Lovable Eternal Public" of Book Lovers Stella Deen; 5. "The Magazine Short Story and the Real Short Story": Consuming Fiction in the Feminist Weekly Time and Tide Catherine Clay; 6. Making the Modern Girl: Fantasy Consumption and Desire in Romance Weeklies of the 1920s Lise Shapiro Sanders; 7. "Dear Cinema Girls": Girlhood Picturegoing and the Interwar Film Magazine Lisa Stead; Part II: Styling Modern Life; Introduction Barbara Green; 8. Now and Forever?: Fashion Magazines and the Temporality of the Interwar Period Elizabeth M. Sheehan; 9. 'Eve Goes Synthetic': Modernising Feminine Beauty Renegotiating Masculinity in Britannia and Eve Ilya Parkins; 10. Miss Modern: Youthful Feminine Modernity and the Nascent Teenager 1930-40 Penny Tinkler; 11. 'The Lady Interviewer and her methods': Chatter Celebrity and Reading Communities Rebecca Roach; 12. The Picturegoer: Cinema Rotogravure and the Reshaping of the Female Face Gerry Beegan; Part III: Reimagining Homes Housewives and Domesticity; Introduction Fiona Hackney; 13. Housekeeping Citizenship and Nationhood in Good Housekeeping and Modern Home Alice Wood; 14. Modern Housecraft? Women's Pages in the National Daily Press Adrian Bingham; 15. Labour Woman and the Housewife Karen Hunt; 16. Friendship and Support Conflict and Rivalry: Multiple Uses of the Correspondence Column in Childcare Magazines 1919-1939 Kath Holden; 17. Documentary Feminism: Evelyn Sharp the Women's Pages and the Manchester Guardian Barbara Green; 18. Y Gymraes (The Welshwoman): Ambivalent Domesticity in Women's Welsh-language Interwar Print Media Lisa Sheppard; 19. Woman Appeal. A New Rhetoric of Consumption: Women's Domestic Magazines in the 1920s and 1930s Fiona Hackney; PART IV: Feminist Media and Agendas for Change; Introduction: Maria DiCenzo; 20: 'Many More Worlds to Conquer': the Feminist Press Beyond Suffrage Maria DiCenzo and Claire Eustance; 21. The Essay Series and Feminist Debate: Controversy and Conversation about Women and Work in Time and Tide Laurel Forster; 22. Internationalism Empire and Peace in the Women Teacher 1920-1939 Joyce Goodman; 23. Providing and Taking the Opportunity: Women Civil Servants and Feminist Periodical Culture in Interwar Britain Helen Glew; 24. Debating Feminism in the Socialist Press: Women and the New Leader June Hannam; 25. Ireland and Sapphic Journalism between the Wars: A Case Study of Urania (1916-1940) Karen Steele; Part V: Women's Organisations and Communities of Interest; Introduction Maria DiCenzo; 26. Housewives and Citizens: Encouraging Active Citizenship in the Print Media of Housewives' Associations during the Interwar Years Caitríona Beaumont; 27. Woman's Outlook 1919-1939: An Educational Space for Co-operative Women Natalie Bradbury; 28. A Periodical of Their Own: Feminist Writing in Religious Print Media Jacqueline R. deVries; 29. Women's Print Media Fascism and the Far Right in Britain Between the Wars Julie Gottlieb; 30: 'The Sheep and the Goats': Interwar Women Journalists the Society of Women Journalists and the Woman Journalist Sarah Lonsdale.
General Introduction Catherine Clay Maria DiCenzo Barbara Green and Fiona Hackney; Part I: Culture and the Modern Woman; Introduction Catherine Clay; 1. "Tricks of Aspect and the Varied Gifts of Daylight": Representations of Books and Reading in Interwar Women's Periodicals Claire Battershill; 2. "A Journal of the Period": Modernism and Conservative Modernity in Eve: The Lady's Pictorial (1919-1929) Vike Martina Plock; 3. Sketching Out America's Jazz Age in British Vogue Natalie Kalich; 4. Clemence Dane's Literary Criticism for Good Housekeeping: Cultivating a "Small Comical Lovable Eternal Public" of Book Lovers Stella Deen; 5. "The Magazine Short Story and the Real Short Story": Consuming Fiction in the Feminist Weekly Time and Tide Catherine Clay; 6. Making the Modern Girl: Fantasy Consumption and Desire in Romance Weeklies of the 1920s Lise Shapiro Sanders; 7. "Dear Cinema Girls": Girlhood Picturegoing and the Interwar Film Magazine Lisa Stead; Part II: Styling Modern Life; Introduction Barbara Green; 8. Now and Forever?: Fashion Magazines and the Temporality of the Interwar Period Elizabeth M. Sheehan; 9. 'Eve Goes Synthetic': Modernising Feminine Beauty Renegotiating Masculinity in Britannia and Eve Ilya Parkins; 10. Miss Modern: Youthful Feminine Modernity and the Nascent Teenager 1930-40 Penny Tinkler; 11. 'The Lady Interviewer and her methods': Chatter Celebrity and Reading Communities Rebecca Roach; 12. The Picturegoer: Cinema Rotogravure and the Reshaping of the Female Face Gerry Beegan; Part III: Reimagining Homes Housewives and Domesticity; Introduction Fiona Hackney; 13. Housekeeping Citizenship and Nationhood in Good Housekeeping and Modern Home Alice Wood; 14. Modern Housecraft? Women's Pages in the National Daily Press Adrian Bingham; 15. Labour Woman and the Housewife Karen Hunt; 16. Friendship and Support Conflict and Rivalry: Multiple Uses of the Correspondence Column in Childcare Magazines 1919-1939 Kath Holden; 17. Documentary Feminism: Evelyn Sharp the Women's Pages and the Manchester Guardian Barbara Green; 18. Y Gymraes (The Welshwoman): Ambivalent Domesticity in Women's Welsh-language Interwar Print Media Lisa Sheppard; 19. Woman Appeal. A New Rhetoric of Consumption: Women's Domestic Magazines in the 1920s and 1930s Fiona Hackney; PART IV: Feminist Media and Agendas for Change; Introduction: Maria DiCenzo; 20: 'Many More Worlds to Conquer': the Feminist Press Beyond Suffrage Maria DiCenzo and Claire Eustance; 21. The Essay Series and Feminist Debate: Controversy and Conversation about Women and Work in Time and Tide Laurel Forster; 22. Internationalism Empire and Peace in the Women Teacher 1920-1939 Joyce Goodman; 23. Providing and Taking the Opportunity: Women Civil Servants and Feminist Periodical Culture in Interwar Britain Helen Glew; 24. Debating Feminism in the Socialist Press: Women and the New Leader June Hannam; 25. Ireland and Sapphic Journalism between the Wars: A Case Study of Urania (1916-1940) Karen Steele; Part V: Women's Organisations and Communities of Interest; Introduction Maria DiCenzo; 26. Housewives and Citizens: Encouraging Active Citizenship in the Print Media of Housewives' Associations during the Interwar Years Caitríona Beaumont; 27. Woman's Outlook 1919-1939: An Educational Space for Co-operative Women Natalie Bradbury; 28. A Periodical of Their Own: Feminist Writing in Religious Print Media Jacqueline R. deVries; 29. Women's Print Media Fascism and the Far Right in Britain Between the Wars Julie Gottlieb; 30: 'The Sheep and the Goats': Interwar Women Journalists the Society of Women Journalists and the Woman Journalist Sarah Lonsdale.
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