This article presents a preliminary approach to the study of the images of the New Woman in the publications "The Irish Times" and "The Weekly Irish Times" at the turn of the twentieth century. From the theoretical framework of women’s studies the concept of New Woman is analysed in relation to that of New Journalism, which arose at the same time. Additionally, the aetiology and features of the two publications, plus the criteria for corpus selection, are described, and the corpus texts are compared to similar English publications of the period. The complex political situation in Ireland at the turn of the century is also considered. The role of women and the various perceptions of them are analysed, both in the sections of letters to the E...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
Tina O’Toole’s The Irish New Woman attends to an obscured issue in the field of New Woman studies, n...
This project assesses the extent and significance of Irish contributions to the British periodical p...
[Abstract] This article presents a preliminary approach to the study of the images of the New Woman ...
My thesis uncovers innovative ways of re-reading the New Woman. By purposefully moving away from nov...
This article analyses the representation of women in the Irish press at the end of the Celtic Tiger ...
Gendered discourse and Irish nationalism during the revolutionary period evolved as part of the same...
The theme of this book is cultural encounter and exchange in Irish women’s lives. Using three case s...
This research examines women’s changing gender roles and related changes in female dress in the peri...
Reductive definitions characterise many of the representations of women in the media. These depictio...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
This book focuses on the representation of the Gaeltacht in the Irish press. It examines texts from ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This dissertation addresses the representation of women in the Irish press from 1908 to 1916. The st...
In recent years, we have seen an increase in feminist media studies, yet the vast majority of commu...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
Tina O’Toole’s The Irish New Woman attends to an obscured issue in the field of New Woman studies, n...
This project assesses the extent and significance of Irish contributions to the British periodical p...
[Abstract] This article presents a preliminary approach to the study of the images of the New Woman ...
My thesis uncovers innovative ways of re-reading the New Woman. By purposefully moving away from nov...
This article analyses the representation of women in the Irish press at the end of the Celtic Tiger ...
Gendered discourse and Irish nationalism during the revolutionary period evolved as part of the same...
The theme of this book is cultural encounter and exchange in Irish women’s lives. Using three case s...
This research examines women’s changing gender roles and related changes in female dress in the peri...
Reductive definitions characterise many of the representations of women in the media. These depictio...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
This book focuses on the representation of the Gaeltacht in the Irish press. It examines texts from ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This dissertation addresses the representation of women in the Irish press from 1908 to 1916. The st...
In recent years, we have seen an increase in feminist media studies, yet the vast majority of commu...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
Tina O’Toole’s The Irish New Woman attends to an obscured issue in the field of New Woman studies, n...
This project assesses the extent and significance of Irish contributions to the British periodical p...