Women's Magazines in Print and New Media (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Rooks, Noliwe; Weekley, Ayana; Pass, Victoria
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Women's Magazines in Print and New Media (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Rooks, Noliwe; Weekley, Ayana; Pass, Victoria
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This volume, spanning three centuries, makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the significance of representations of race and gender in popular culture and in relation to women's magazines both old and new.
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This volume, spanning three centuries, makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the significance of representations of race and gender in popular culture and in relation to women's magazines both old and new.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134832538
- Artikelnr.: 46883047
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134832538
- Artikelnr.: 46883047
Noliwe Rooks is Associate Professor in Africana Studies and Feminist, Gender, Sexuality Studies at Cornell University. Victoria Rose Pass is Assistant Professor of Art History at Salisbury University. Ayana K. Weekley is an Assistant Professor in the Women's and Gender Studies program at Grand Valley State University.
Introduction: Reading Race and Gender/Writing Identity and Culture
[Noliwe Rooks]
Section I: Narrative Constructions of Race and Gender
Introduction to Section I
[Ayana Weekley]
1. Debating the College Woman: The Ladies' Home Journal and Middle-Class
White Womanhood, 1890-1920
[Michele Curran Cornell]
2. What's Your Face Value?: The Businessman in 1930s Shaving Ads
[Danielle Wetmore]
3. Respectable Activists: Media Images of Women in the NAACP During the
Early Civil Rights Era
[Caroline Emmons]
4. When AIDS Arrived: HIV/AIDS Coverage in Essence and Cosmopolitan
[Ayana Weekley]
Section II: Between Production and Reception
Introduction to Section II
[Victoria Pass]
5. Soul Sister Journey: Essence Magazine and Travel Columns During the "Me"
Decade
[Siobhon Carter-David]
6. The Woman's Era: Constructing Black Women's Political Identity in the
Late 19th Century
[Utaukwa Allen]
7. Beneath the Surface and Between the Lines: Lesbian Form in Postwar
Seventeen
[Rebecca Burditt]
8. Blackface en Vogue: Racialized Representations in the Fashion Magazine
[Julia Brilling]
9. Encountering Africa in Vogue: Irving Penn's African Essays
[Victoria Pass]
Section III: From Creation to Cultural Analysis
Introduction to Section III
[Noliwe Rooks]
10. "White Trash" Celebrity: Shame and Display
[Hannah Yelin]
11. An Interview with Kimberly N. Foster, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, For
Harriet
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
12. #TeamLightSkin v. #TeamDarkSkin: Colorism on Twitter
[Sherri Williams]
13. Interview with Tamura Lomax, Co-Founder and Editor, The Feminist Wire
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
Section IV: Resources for Scholars
14. Women in Print Magazines and New Media: A Bibliography
[Noliwe Rooks]
Section I: Narrative Constructions of Race and Gender
Introduction to Section I
[Ayana Weekley]
1. Debating the College Woman: The Ladies' Home Journal and Middle-Class
White Womanhood, 1890-1920
[Michele Curran Cornell]
2. What's Your Face Value?: The Businessman in 1930s Shaving Ads
[Danielle Wetmore]
3. Respectable Activists: Media Images of Women in the NAACP During the
Early Civil Rights Era
[Caroline Emmons]
4. When AIDS Arrived: HIV/AIDS Coverage in Essence and Cosmopolitan
[Ayana Weekley]
Section II: Between Production and Reception
Introduction to Section II
[Victoria Pass]
5. Soul Sister Journey: Essence Magazine and Travel Columns During the "Me"
Decade
[Siobhon Carter-David]
6. The Woman's Era: Constructing Black Women's Political Identity in the
Late 19th Century
[Utaukwa Allen]
7. Beneath the Surface and Between the Lines: Lesbian Form in Postwar
Seventeen
[Rebecca Burditt]
8. Blackface en Vogue: Racialized Representations in the Fashion Magazine
[Julia Brilling]
9. Encountering Africa in Vogue: Irving Penn's African Essays
[Victoria Pass]
Section III: From Creation to Cultural Analysis
Introduction to Section III
[Noliwe Rooks]
10. "White Trash" Celebrity: Shame and Display
[Hannah Yelin]
11. An Interview with Kimberly N. Foster, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, For
Harriet
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
12. #TeamLightSkin v. #TeamDarkSkin: Colorism on Twitter
[Sherri Williams]
13. Interview with Tamura Lomax, Co-Founder and Editor, The Feminist Wire
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
Section IV: Resources for Scholars
14. Women in Print Magazines and New Media: A Bibliography
Introduction: Reading Race and Gender/Writing Identity and Culture
[Noliwe Rooks]
Section I: Narrative Constructions of Race and Gender
Introduction to Section I
[Ayana Weekley]
1. Debating the College Woman: The Ladies' Home Journal and Middle-Class
White Womanhood, 1890-1920
[Michele Curran Cornell]
2. What's Your Face Value?: The Businessman in 1930s Shaving Ads
[Danielle Wetmore]
3. Respectable Activists: Media Images of Women in the NAACP During the
Early Civil Rights Era
[Caroline Emmons]
4. When AIDS Arrived: HIV/AIDS Coverage in Essence and Cosmopolitan
[Ayana Weekley]
Section II: Between Production and Reception
Introduction to Section II
[Victoria Pass]
5. Soul Sister Journey: Essence Magazine and Travel Columns During the "Me"
Decade
[Siobhon Carter-David]
6. The Woman's Era: Constructing Black Women's Political Identity in the
Late 19th Century
[Utaukwa Allen]
7. Beneath the Surface and Between the Lines: Lesbian Form in Postwar
Seventeen
[Rebecca Burditt]
8. Blackface en Vogue: Racialized Representations in the Fashion Magazine
[Julia Brilling]
9. Encountering Africa in Vogue: Irving Penn's African Essays
[Victoria Pass]
Section III: From Creation to Cultural Analysis
Introduction to Section III
[Noliwe Rooks]
10. "White Trash" Celebrity: Shame and Display
[Hannah Yelin]
11. An Interview with Kimberly N. Foster, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, For
Harriet
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
12. #TeamLightSkin v. #TeamDarkSkin: Colorism on Twitter
[Sherri Williams]
13. Interview with Tamura Lomax, Co-Founder and Editor, The Feminist Wire
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
Section IV: Resources for Scholars
14. Women in Print Magazines and New Media: A Bibliography
[Noliwe Rooks]
Section I: Narrative Constructions of Race and Gender
Introduction to Section I
[Ayana Weekley]
1. Debating the College Woman: The Ladies' Home Journal and Middle-Class
White Womanhood, 1890-1920
[Michele Curran Cornell]
2. What's Your Face Value?: The Businessman in 1930s Shaving Ads
[Danielle Wetmore]
3. Respectable Activists: Media Images of Women in the NAACP During the
Early Civil Rights Era
[Caroline Emmons]
4. When AIDS Arrived: HIV/AIDS Coverage in Essence and Cosmopolitan
[Ayana Weekley]
Section II: Between Production and Reception
Introduction to Section II
[Victoria Pass]
5. Soul Sister Journey: Essence Magazine and Travel Columns During the "Me"
Decade
[Siobhon Carter-David]
6. The Woman's Era: Constructing Black Women's Political Identity in the
Late 19th Century
[Utaukwa Allen]
7. Beneath the Surface and Between the Lines: Lesbian Form in Postwar
Seventeen
[Rebecca Burditt]
8. Blackface en Vogue: Racialized Representations in the Fashion Magazine
[Julia Brilling]
9. Encountering Africa in Vogue: Irving Penn's African Essays
[Victoria Pass]
Section III: From Creation to Cultural Analysis
Introduction to Section III
[Noliwe Rooks]
10. "White Trash" Celebrity: Shame and Display
[Hannah Yelin]
11. An Interview with Kimberly N. Foster, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, For
Harriet
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
12. #TeamLightSkin v. #TeamDarkSkin: Colorism on Twitter
[Sherri Williams]
13. Interview with Tamura Lomax, Co-Founder and Editor, The Feminist Wire
[Noliwe Rooks and Ashley Black]
Section IV: Resources for Scholars
14. Women in Print Magazines and New Media: A Bibliography