OVER THE FIRST THREE DECADES FOLLOWING THE WRIGHT BROTHERS ’ TRIUMPH AT KITTY HAWK, AMERICANS ACROSS RACIAL AND GENDER LINES BECAME FASCINATED by the rich possibilities of flight. Especially after World War I (WWI), ordinary men and women were enraptured by what historian Joseph Corn has called “the gospel of aviation,” popular fascination with the marvelous, even magical, implications of flying. Many thrilled to the sense of leaving behind Earthbound limits, exploring suggestions that aviation had the power to cure disease, avert wars, and literally bring human beings closer to heaven
Jane Dulaney Hilbert: Appalachian Aviator Jessica Newell The Archives of Appalachia preserves the pa...
Women have been flying since 1910, and since that time, they have faced discrimination. During Wor...
The Aviation industry has developed extensively since its establishment by the Wright Brothers in 19...
Despite technological advances in aviation that have made flying more reliably safe,certain rhetoric...
Women run wind tunnel experiments, direct air traffic, and fabricate airplanes. American women have ...
In the summer of 1969, one year after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. sparked ...
This paper explores the effects of aviation technology on the Flying African myth by examining sever...
Amelia Earhart’s prominence in American aviation during the 1930s obscures a crucial point: she was ...
Despite the enthusiasm for aviation sparked by the historic flight of the Wright brothers in 1903, p...
The story of America’s early black aviators from the 1920s and 1930s has been one of the neglected t...
This dissertation uses a feminist analytical lens to study questions of power and difference in the ...
Around 1900, Charmion (alias Laverie Vallée) introduced a provocative ‘trapeze disrobing act,’ combi...
The early twentieth century saw the proliferation of modern feminist values that challenged the noti...
This thesis explores how the complex interplay between gender and technology significantly shaped th...
The 1920s and \u2730s have been identified as the \u27golden age\u27 for women who aspired to a care...
Jane Dulaney Hilbert: Appalachian Aviator Jessica Newell The Archives of Appalachia preserves the pa...
Women have been flying since 1910, and since that time, they have faced discrimination. During Wor...
The Aviation industry has developed extensively since its establishment by the Wright Brothers in 19...
Despite technological advances in aviation that have made flying more reliably safe,certain rhetoric...
Women run wind tunnel experiments, direct air traffic, and fabricate airplanes. American women have ...
In the summer of 1969, one year after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. sparked ...
This paper explores the effects of aviation technology on the Flying African myth by examining sever...
Amelia Earhart’s prominence in American aviation during the 1930s obscures a crucial point: she was ...
Despite the enthusiasm for aviation sparked by the historic flight of the Wright brothers in 1903, p...
The story of America’s early black aviators from the 1920s and 1930s has been one of the neglected t...
This dissertation uses a feminist analytical lens to study questions of power and difference in the ...
Around 1900, Charmion (alias Laverie Vallée) introduced a provocative ‘trapeze disrobing act,’ combi...
The early twentieth century saw the proliferation of modern feminist values that challenged the noti...
This thesis explores how the complex interplay between gender and technology significantly shaped th...
The 1920s and \u2730s have been identified as the \u27golden age\u27 for women who aspired to a care...
Jane Dulaney Hilbert: Appalachian Aviator Jessica Newell The Archives of Appalachia preserves the pa...
Women have been flying since 1910, and since that time, they have faced discrimination. During Wor...
The Aviation industry has developed extensively since its establishment by the Wright Brothers in 19...