This dissertation interrogates the roles played by women editors, publishers, and patrons, and the media they controlled (little magazines and presses), in the cultivation of avant-garde and modernist audiences and appreciation. Drawing on queer and gender theory, as well as bibliographic and paratextual research, this project recovers the careers of five women editors and publishers—Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap (The Little Review); Bryher, née Annie Winifred Ellerman (Contact Editions, Close Up, Life and Letters To-Day, and Brendin Press); Jessie Redmon Fauset (The Crisis and The Brownies\u27 Book), and Harriet Shaw Weaver (The Egoist and Egoist Press)—who deliberately cultivated and educated readers for modern artists through their pub...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation investigates the material conditions that produced modernist literature by interro...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation interrogates the roles played by women editors, publishers, and patrons, and the m...
This dissertation interrogates the roles played by women editors, publishers, and patrons, and the m...
The resurgence of modern periodical studies has expanded our understanding of “littleqrdquo; magazin...
This thesis posits The Little Review as the quintessential example of queer, networked modernism, ar...
For many years young writers experimenting with forms and aesthetics in the early decades of this ce...
Challenging the tendency of scholars to view women writers of the modernist era as isolated artists ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Issues of Modernism draws from the rich archive of ...
This dissertation looks at the changing relationship between modernist writers and commercial publis...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
Publishing has evolved into a feminized profession, with women filling approximately 84 percent of p...
Modernism and its twentieth-century wake witnessed the gradual decline of the very power its incipie...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation investigates the material conditions that produced modernist literature by interro...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation interrogates the roles played by women editors, publishers, and patrons, and the m...
This dissertation interrogates the roles played by women editors, publishers, and patrons, and the m...
The resurgence of modern periodical studies has expanded our understanding of “littleqrdquo; magazin...
This thesis posits The Little Review as the quintessential example of queer, networked modernism, ar...
For many years young writers experimenting with forms and aesthetics in the early decades of this ce...
Challenging the tendency of scholars to view women writers of the modernist era as isolated artists ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Issues of Modernism draws from the rich archive of ...
This dissertation looks at the changing relationship between modernist writers and commercial publis...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
This book spotlights the impact of radical transformations of print media in the US and UK on the dy...
Publishing has evolved into a feminized profession, with women filling approximately 84 percent of p...
Modernism and its twentieth-century wake witnessed the gradual decline of the very power its incipie...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation investigates the material conditions that produced modernist literature by interro...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...