My thesis uncovers innovative ways of re-reading the New Woman. By purposefully moving away from novelistic representations, I have reinvigorated the saturated area of New Woman studies, capturing instances of her elusive nature in the 1890s woman’s press. I reveal the unique coincidence between subject matter and publishing practice in my investigation of five 1890s women’s magazines: Shafts (1892-1899), Woman’s Signal (1894-1899), Young Woman (1892-1915), Woman (1890-1912) and Lady’s Realm (1896-1914). I split the magazines into liberally feminist – Shafts and the Signal – and conservatively progressive – Young Woman, Woman and Lady’s Realm. The first three chapters produce case-studies of individual magazines. The final chapter explores ...
Graduate Paper, Digital Humanities Forum 2014: Nodes & Networks in the Humanities. University of Ka...
New Women, New Mothers contributes to New Woman scholarship by investigating the background, substan...
The purpose of this study was to better understand the ways in which American women were portrayed d...
The 1890s saw an increasing feminization of the literary marketplace, as more than a hundred novels ...
© 2015 Dr. Natasha Amy StoryWho was the American New Woman and why was she important to female liter...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This dissertation investigates the conflict between the powerful emancipatory image of the New Woman...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
Since the 1970s, the literary and cultural politics of the turn-of-the-century New Woman have receiv...
The so-called “New Woman”—that determined and free-wheeling figure in “rational” dress, demanding ed...
In recent years, we have seen an increase in feminist media studies, yet the vast majority of commu...
"Ardis identifies the New Woman novel as an important locus of change at the turn of the century; a ...
This project has won the First Place Award for Outstanding Student Scholarship, The Ohio State Unive...
This thesis examines the close and complex relationship between dress, feminism, and British New Wom...
Graduate Paper, Digital Humanities Forum 2014: Nodes & Networks in the Humanities. University of Ka...
New Women, New Mothers contributes to New Woman scholarship by investigating the background, substan...
The purpose of this study was to better understand the ways in which American women were portrayed d...
The 1890s saw an increasing feminization of the literary marketplace, as more than a hundred novels ...
© 2015 Dr. Natasha Amy StoryWho was the American New Woman and why was she important to female liter...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This study contributes to current critical discussions about the figure of the Victorian woman journ...
This dissertation investigates the conflict between the powerful emancipatory image of the New Woman...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
Since the 1970s, the literary and cultural politics of the turn-of-the-century New Woman have receiv...
The so-called “New Woman”—that determined and free-wheeling figure in “rational” dress, demanding ed...
In recent years, we have seen an increase in feminist media studies, yet the vast majority of commu...
"Ardis identifies the New Woman novel as an important locus of change at the turn of the century; a ...
This project has won the First Place Award for Outstanding Student Scholarship, The Ohio State Unive...
This thesis examines the close and complex relationship between dress, feminism, and British New Wom...
Graduate Paper, Digital Humanities Forum 2014: Nodes & Networks in the Humanities. University of Ka...
New Women, New Mothers contributes to New Woman scholarship by investigating the background, substan...
The purpose of this study was to better understand the ways in which American women were portrayed d...