A scrapbook (1885-1901) belonging to Ethelwyn Wetherald. The contents include “The Canadian Bookman” October 1931, “The Challenge” March 1933, “The Canadian” April 1933, articles written by Wetherald on various subjects for “the Globe”, “Women’s world” etc
International audienceThe article deals with two short stories by Thomas Hardy: “An Imaginative Woma...
Major: History and Political ScienceMinor: Asian StudiesFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderr
By 1916 over 13 million women or 12.7 % of the total U.S. population was considered overweight or ‘‘...
Another article by Ethelwyn Wetherald under the pseudonym Bel Thistlethwaite focused on corsets and ...
Demorest's Family Magazine. July 1881. Vol. 17, No. 7. -- The Next Generation -- Angelica Kauffmann ...
Digitized from original print, Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections, April 24,...
The paper examines the relationship between late nineteenth century women, their freedom, and their ...
The co-eds, Susie Short and Tilly Tall were standing by the Post Office chatting of form and fashion...
The Victorian novel is dominated by heroines, its narrative driven by their impulses and their irrep...
During the Victorian era, the Bloomer and Divided Skirt ignited intense debates in the society, prov...
This article offers a survey of the recently discovered scrapbooks collated over a number of decades...
Some of the first fitted ready-made garments in production were corsets. Fashions of the Victorian ...
Between 1820 and 1850, an active and robust movement to eradicate women’s corsets and the practice o...
Women’s bodies have always been charged by social associations that aim to control, shape, and disci...
© 1999 Dr. Leigh SummersThere is perhaps no other garment so quintessentially Victorian as the corse...
International audienceThe article deals with two short stories by Thomas Hardy: “An Imaginative Woma...
Major: History and Political ScienceMinor: Asian StudiesFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderr
By 1916 over 13 million women or 12.7 % of the total U.S. population was considered overweight or ‘‘...
Another article by Ethelwyn Wetherald under the pseudonym Bel Thistlethwaite focused on corsets and ...
Demorest's Family Magazine. July 1881. Vol. 17, No. 7. -- The Next Generation -- Angelica Kauffmann ...
Digitized from original print, Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections, April 24,...
The paper examines the relationship between late nineteenth century women, their freedom, and their ...
The co-eds, Susie Short and Tilly Tall were standing by the Post Office chatting of form and fashion...
The Victorian novel is dominated by heroines, its narrative driven by their impulses and their irrep...
During the Victorian era, the Bloomer and Divided Skirt ignited intense debates in the society, prov...
This article offers a survey of the recently discovered scrapbooks collated over a number of decades...
Some of the first fitted ready-made garments in production were corsets. Fashions of the Victorian ...
Between 1820 and 1850, an active and robust movement to eradicate women’s corsets and the practice o...
Women’s bodies have always been charged by social associations that aim to control, shape, and disci...
© 1999 Dr. Leigh SummersThere is perhaps no other garment so quintessentially Victorian as the corse...
International audienceThe article deals with two short stories by Thomas Hardy: “An Imaginative Woma...
Major: History and Political ScienceMinor: Asian StudiesFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderr
By 1916 over 13 million women or 12.7 % of the total U.S. population was considered overweight or ‘‘...