The Clubwomen's Daughters: Collectivist Impulses in Progressive-era Girl's Fiction, 1890-1940Taylor & Francis, 2000 - 162 หน้า During the nineteenth-century, American women discovered that they could gain access to traditionally-male spaces such as the college campus, the playing field, and the political Woman's Suffrage Organization, the National Colored Women's Association, and the Women's Christian Temperance Union. Eager to pass on this strategy to the next generation of young women, Progressive-era clubwomen authors created narratives that featured community-minded protagonists who worked alongside their peers to achieve empowerment and self-actualization. Chapters One and Two trace the development and aims of the clubwomen's movement and include an analysis of the movement based on issues of race and class. They describe the economic factors that led culturally conservative book publishers to put aside their personal beliefs concerning women's rights in order to cash in on the lucrative girls' fiction market, and they analyze the way that young girls used their purchasing power to demand fiction that mirrored their desires for peer interaction and for access to the public realm. Chapters Three through Six demonstrate that each successive wave of progressive-era girls' fiction--from the college novel in the 1910s to the scouting novel in the 1920s to the detective novel in the 1930s--features heroines who move further into the public realm and who gain increasing autonomy and self-esteem in the process. Finally, a comparison of the lives of young readers to those of their fictional counterparts demonstrates that girls' fiction had a significant impact on its intended audience, encouraging them to create or to join peer groups and to strive for success beyond the traditional occupations of housewife and mother. Authors discussed include Christina Catrevis, Jessie Graham Flower (psued. of Josephine Chase), Frances E. W. Harper, Emma Dunham Kelley, Irene Elliot Benson, Laura Lee Hope (psued. of Lilian Garis), Carolyn Keene (psued. of Mildred Wirt Benson), and Margaret Sutton. |
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The Clubwomen's Daughters: Collectivist Impulses in Progressive-era Girl's ... Gwen Tarbox ชมบางส่วนของหนังสือ - 2014 |
The Clubwomen's Daughters: Collectivist Impulses in Progressive-era Girl's ... Gwen Tarbox ชมบางส่วนของหนังสือ - 2014 |
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adventure African-American Altemus American girls American Women Anne Boston Boy Scouts Campfire Girls camping Carolyn Keene Carolyn Stewart Dyer Century Charlotte clubwomen collectivist impulse college fiction College Girls Cottage City culture Deepdale domestic Drew Mystery Stories Dyer and Nancy Edward Stratemeyer Elizabeth Cady Stanton Emma Dunham Kelley-Hawkins female Four Girls Freshman friends Gender Girl Scouts Girls at Cottage Girls of Deepdale Grace Harlowe's Grosset & Dunlap Gulick Helen heroines Home Journal Judy Bolton Katy Keene Mildred Wirt Lilian Garis Marjorie Spruill Wheeler Mary Megda Mildred Wirt Benson Mother Mount Holyoke Nancy Drew Nancy Drew Mystery Nancy Tillman Romalov novel organization Outdoor Girls Overton College popular Progressive era Progressive-era Progressive-era girls public woman published Quoted Rediscovering Nancy Drew role social Stratemeyer Syndicate suffragists Susan Troutdale Vassar College Willard Woman Suffrage Movement woman's club women's colleges women's rights York young girls young readers young women
ข้อมูลอ้างอิงหนังสือเล่มนี้
American Sweethearts: Teenage Girls in Twentieth-century Popular Culture Ilana Nash มุมมองอย่างย่อ - 2006 |