Blue Pencils & Hidden Hands: Women Editing Periodicals, 1830-1910

Capa
Sharon M. Harris, Ellen Gruber Garvey
UPNE, 2004 - 279 páginas
During the long nineteenth century, American women editors of magazines, then the dominant mass medium for information in the United States, exerted a vital force over a burgeoning community of readers and were crucial in redefining women's identities and roles in the nation's changing social and cultural landscape. This collection of original critical essays builds on a growing body of scholarship to explore the varied editorial practices of women editors from diverse race, class, and ethnic backgrounds. Examining a broad spectrum of periodicals, including school newspapers, children's and fashion magazines, and activist political journals, the contributors delve into three major areas: women apprentices in magazine publishing; women who drew on their editorial experience to create other forms of literary, artistic, and activist expressions; and women who established careers as editors. Enriching the essays are selections from the periodicals themselves, revealing how Ann S. Stephens, Frances Wright, Pauline Hopkins, Kate Field, Zitkala-Sa, and others wielded their editorial pen to shape public opinion about such issues as woman suffrage, abolitionism, and domestic violence.
 

Índice

A Formative Experience
3
Excerpt from The Jabberwock
19
Excerpt from The Nashville American
36
Excerpts from Portland Magazine
58
Excerpts from Frank Leslies Chimney Corner
75
Excerpt from the Free Enquirer
96
Excerpt from The Womans Journal
121
Excerpt from The Indian Helper
144
Excerpt from Colored American Magazine
170
Excerpts from The American Indian Magazine
198
Antebellum Lady Editors and the Language of Authority
205
Mary Louise Booth and Harpers Bazar
225
Excerpts from Harpers Bazar
244
Excerpt from Kate Fields Washington
261
Index
269
Direitos de autor

An African American
146

Outras edições - Ver tudo

Palavras e frases frequentes

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