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  • KOBV  (2)
  • Online Resource  (2)
  • AV-Medium
  • Undetermined  (2)
  • Romanian
  • Hollows, Joanne  (2)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London : Bloomsbury Publishing
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource)
    DDC: 306
    Keywords: Households History 19th century ; Households History 20th century ; Women Social life and customs 19th century ; Women Social life and customs 20th century ; Social Class History ; Gender Identity History ; Home economics ; Consumption (Economics) Social aspects ; Lesson plans ; Great Britain Social conditions 19th century ; Great Britain Social conditions 20th century
    Abstract: Introduction -- Unit Outline. Week 1 Introduction: Why Study Domestic Culture? ; Week 2 Gender, Class, and the Separation of Spheres ; Week 3 Working-class Domestic Life in the Nineteenth Century ; Week 4 The Garden and the Suburb ; Week 5 Gender, Class, and the Politics of Suburban Domesticity ; Week 6 Domestic Space as Workplace 1: Domestic Service and Domestic Labour ; Week 7 Domestic Space as Workplace 2: Housewives and Homemaking ; Week 8 Domestic Consumption ; Week 9 Representing Class and Domestic Culture ; Week 10 Feminism, Femininity, and Domestic Culture -- Assessment Options -- Further Reading -- Enrichment Materials.
    Abstract: Introduction: Primarily aimed at undergraduates studying history or cultural studies, this ten-week unit introduces students to the importance of domestic cultures in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Britain. Engaging with debates about the separation and gendering of public and private spheres, the unit examines how ideas of home are the products of distinctive historical contexts and transformations. It explores how specific values and meanings have been mapped on to public and private spheres and structured everyday life and shaped identities. The unit pays particular attention to how domestic cultures are gendered and classed, and how they need to be understood within--and contribute to--wider power relations and inequalities. The lessons also question whether public and private can simply be understood as distinct and bounded spheres. The unit encourages students to analyze primary sources to understand how the meaning of home is created across a range of cultural forms and practices such as domestic advice literature and cookbooks, art, radio and television programming, and women's magazines
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , Zielgruppe - Audience: Primarily aimed at undergraduates studying history or cultural studies , Mode of access: World Wide Web.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London : Bloomsbury Publishing
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource)
    DDC: 306
    Keywords: Mass media ; Mass media and culture History 18th century ; Mass media and culture History 19th century ; Mass media and culture History 20th century ; Lifestyles ; Advertising ; Lesson plans
    Abstract: Introduction -- Unit Outline. Week 1 Sensory Media: Eighteenth-Century Print Media Cultures ; Week 2 Sensory Media: "New" Media and Nineteenth-Century Urban Cultures ; Week 3 Sensory Media: Media and Experience in the Twentieth Century ; Week 4 Mass Communications and "Mass" Audiences in Interwar Britain ; Week 5 Domestic Consumption of Broadcasting in Interwar Britain ; Week 6 Media Representations of Everyday Life in Interwar Britain ; Week 7 Advertising, Consumer Culture, and National Identity in the Postwar Period ; Week 8 Media, Consumer Culture, and Generation: Childhood and Youth in the Postwar Period ; Week 9 Memory, "The Past," and Everyday Life on Screen -- Assessment Options -- Further Reading.
    Abstract: Introduction: Primarily aimed at undergraduates studying history, media studies, or cultural studies, this term-long nine-week unit explores the changing and complex relationships between the media and everyday life from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. Rather than focusing simply on the history of media industries, institutions, or texts, the unit examines a range of ways in which media shape--and are shaped by--everyday life as they are put to use in a range of historical and national contexts. Carefully avoiding technological determinism, it is designed to enable students to understand the role of different media in the experience of modernity, from the sights and sounds of the nineteenth-century city to the rhythms and practices of the interwar home. The unit is organized around a series of key themes to enable students to develop more in-depth knowledge of a series of issues such as media and the senses; the media and everyday life in interwar Britain; and the media and consumer culture. Questions of identity are highlighted through an examination of issues such as gender, nation, and age. The unit offers opportunities for students to consolidate their own learning, analyze primary sources, and use audiovisual resources to enhance their directed learning
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , Zielgruppe - Audience: Primarily aimed at undergraduates studying history, media studies, or cultural studies , Mode of access: World Wide Web.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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