The purpose of this study was to better understand the ways in which American women were portrayed during the periods of the True Woman (1870 to 1880) and the New Woman (1890-1905) in Harper\u27s Bazar magazine. During the late 19th century, the role of women in American society and culture began to noticeably change. Qualities that once embodied the ideal True Woman including modesty, submissiveness, physical weakness, limited education, and complete devotion to husband and home were called into question and threatened by the rise of the New Woman. Through construction of fashion images and illustrations, magazines of the late nineteenth century portrayed a desirable lifestyle to its readers. As one of the oldest consecutive running women\...
According to the ambivalence theory of fashion change, the increase of cultural ambivalence within a...
Images of the Modern Woman emerged during the interwar years alongside the expansion of the illustra...
The 1890s saw an increasing feminization of the literary marketplace, as more than a hundred novels ...
An English novelist coined the term New Woman in 1894 as a reference to the many transformations i...
My thesis uncovers innovative ways of re-reading the New Woman. By purposefully moving away from nov...
Major: History and Political ScienceMinor: Asian StudiesFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderr
This dissertation utilizes the motif of the traveling exhibition show in order to analyze how the Ma...
A runaway commercial success in the nineteenth century, the monthly periodical Godey’s Lady’s Book w...
This thesis explores the two main images of womanhood found in the editorial and advertising content...
This thesis is an examination of the American Girl archetype on the covers of the Ladies\u27 Home Jo...
This study examines the rise of American style ill an attempt to theorize the place of clothing desi...
This study exmaines the continuities and changes in images and roles of women in popular magazines f...
This article draws on the writings, including diaries, letters, etiquette books, and popular fiction...
It was the purpose of this study to show how the change of role and status for middle and upper-clas...
Graduation date: 2010The purpose of this study was to explore the possible relationship among fashio...
According to the ambivalence theory of fashion change, the increase of cultural ambivalence within a...
Images of the Modern Woman emerged during the interwar years alongside the expansion of the illustra...
The 1890s saw an increasing feminization of the literary marketplace, as more than a hundred novels ...
An English novelist coined the term New Woman in 1894 as a reference to the many transformations i...
My thesis uncovers innovative ways of re-reading the New Woman. By purposefully moving away from nov...
Major: History and Political ScienceMinor: Asian StudiesFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderr
This dissertation utilizes the motif of the traveling exhibition show in order to analyze how the Ma...
A runaway commercial success in the nineteenth century, the monthly periodical Godey’s Lady’s Book w...
This thesis explores the two main images of womanhood found in the editorial and advertising content...
This thesis is an examination of the American Girl archetype on the covers of the Ladies\u27 Home Jo...
This study examines the rise of American style ill an attempt to theorize the place of clothing desi...
This study exmaines the continuities and changes in images and roles of women in popular magazines f...
This article draws on the writings, including diaries, letters, etiquette books, and popular fiction...
It was the purpose of this study to show how the change of role and status for middle and upper-clas...
Graduation date: 2010The purpose of this study was to explore the possible relationship among fashio...
According to the ambivalence theory of fashion change, the increase of cultural ambivalence within a...
Images of the Modern Woman emerged during the interwar years alongside the expansion of the illustra...
The 1890s saw an increasing feminization of the literary marketplace, as more than a hundred novels ...