ISBN:
9789042029781
,
9042029781
Language:
English
Pages:
Online Ressource (vii, 370 p.)
,
ill.
Edition:
Online-Ausg.
Series Statement:
DQR studies in literature 0921-2507 45
Series Statement:
DQR studies in literature 45
Parallel Title:
Print version Becoming visible
DDC:
305.40973
Keywords:
Women Congresses
;
History
;
19th century
;
United States
;
Women in public life Congresses
;
History
;
19th century
;
United States
;
Women and literature Congresses
;
History
;
19th century
;
United States
;
Women Congresses
;
Political activity
;
History
;
19th century
;
United States
;
Women Congresses
;
Social conditions
;
History
;
19th century
;
United States
;
United States
;
Women Congresses History 19th century
;
Women and literature Congresses History 19th century
;
Women in public life Congresses History 19th century
;
Women Congresses Political activity 19th century
;
History
;
Women Congresses Social conditions 19th century
;
History
;
Women Congresses History 19th century
;
Women Congresses Political activity 19th century
;
History
;
Women and literature Congresses History 19th century
;
Women in public life Congresses History 19th century
;
Women Congresses Social conditions 19th century
;
History
;
Women
;
Conference papers and proceedings
;
History
;
Women and literature
;
Women in public life
;
Women ; Political activity
;
Women ; Social conditions
;
SOCIAL SCIENCE ; Women's Studies
;
United States
;
Electronic books Conference proceedings
;
History
;
Konferenzschrift
Abstract:
Introduction: Becoming visible /Alison Easton, R.J. Ellis, Janet Floyd, and Lindsey Traub --Part I:The changing geography of public and private :Claiming visibility: women in public, public women in the United States, 1865-1910 /Anne M. Boylan --Dangerous working-class women: Mother Jones, Lucy Parsons, and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn /Janet Zandy --Visible women in the needle trades: revisiting the clothing industry in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries /Margaret Walsh --Women's employment in the public and private spheres, 1880-1920 /S.J. Kleinberg --"If Iola were a man": gender, Jim Crow and public protest in the work of Ida B. Wells /Mia Bay --"Outdoor relief": Sarah Orne Jewett, Annie Adams Fields and the visit in gilded age America /Alison Easton --Part II:Stepping out: bodies, spaces and the cultural representation of visibility :Negotiating visibility: Louisa May Alcott's narrative experiments /Lindsey Traub --"People will think you have struck an attitude": fashionable space in Emma Dunham Kelley-Hawkins' novels /R.J. Ellis --"Magnificent equipment": body, sound and space in the representation of the female singer /Janet Floyd --The painful production of Verena Tarrant: John Locke and the Bostonians /Peter Rawlings --"The true American woman": Narcissa Owen's embodied national narrative /Karen L. Kilcup --American women travelers and the material feminine /Shirley Foster --Part III:Becoming "modern" :Gendering modernity: Frances E. Willard's politics of technological sentimentality /Timothy A. Hickman --Women, anti-imperialism and America's Christian mission abroad: the impact of the Philippine-American War /Susan K. Harris --Notes on contributorsSelect bibliography.
Abstract:
This exciting collection of interdisciplinary essays explores the later decades of the nineteenth century in America - the immediate postbellum period, the Gilded Age, and the Progressive Era - as a time of critical change in the cultural visibility of women, as they made new kinds of appearances throughout American society. The essays show how, across the USA, it was fundamentally women who drove changes in their visibility forward, in groups and as individuals. Their motivations, activities and understandings were essential to shaping the character of their present society and the nation's future. The book establishes that these women's engagement with American society and culture cannot be simply understood in terms of the traditional polarities of inside/outside and private/public, since these frames do not fit the complexities of what was happening, be it women's occupation of geographic space, their new patterns of employment, their advocacy of working-class or ethnic rights, or their literary or cultural engagement with their milieux. Such women as Ida B. Wells, Mother Jones, Jane Addams, Rebecca Harding Davis, Willa Cather, Sarah Orne Jewett, Louisa May Alcott and Kate Douglas Wiggin all come under consideration in the light of these radical changes
Note:
Papers from a colloquium "Visible women: American Women and Public Space 1865-1910", at King's College London, held in June 2005. - Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on print version record
,
Papers from a colloquium "Visible women: American Women and Public Space 1865-1910", at King's College London, held in June 2005
,
Introduction: Becoming visible
,
Part I:The changing geography of public and private :Claiming visibility: women in public, public women in the United States, 1865-1910
,
Dangerous working-class women: Mother Jones, Lucy Parsons, and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
,
Visible women in the needle trades: revisiting the clothing industry in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
,
Women's employment in the public and private spheres, 1880-1920
,
"If Iola were a man": gender, Jim Crow and public protest in the work of Ida B. Wells
,
"Outdoor relief": Sarah Orne Jewett, Annie Adams Fields and the visit in gilded age America
,
Part II:Stepping out: bodies, spaces and the cultural representation of visibility :Negotiating visibility: Louisa May Alcott's narrative experiments
,
"People will think you have struck an attitude": fashionable space in Emma Dunham Kelley-Hawkins' novels
,
"Magnificent equipment": body, sound and space in the representation of the female singer
,
The painful production of Verena Tarrant: John Locke and the Bostonians
,
"The true American woman": Narcissa Owen's embodied national narrative
,
American women travelers and the material feminine
,
Part III:Becoming "modern" :Gendering modernity: Frances E. Willard's politics of technological sentimentality
,
Women, anti-imperialism and America's Christian mission abroad: the impact of the Philippine-American War
,
Notes on contributorsSelect bibliography.
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