Home History 34. The Response of the Late Victorian Feminist Press to Same-Sex Desire Controversies
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34. The Response of the Late Victorian Feminist Press to Same-Sex Desire Controversies

  • Molly Youngkin
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© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of Illustrations ix
  4. Acknowledgments xii
  5. Introduction: Women, Periodicals, and Print Culture in the Victorian Period 1
  6. Part I: (Re)Imagining Domestic Life
  7. Introduction 13
  8. 1. The Rise and Rise of the Domestic Magazine: Femininity at Home in Popular Periodicals 18
  9. 2. Regulating Servants in Victorian Women’s Print Media 32
  10. 3. Women Editors’ Transnational Networks in the Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine and Myra’s Journal 46
  11. 4. Women and Family Health in the Mid-Victorian Family Magazine 57
  12. 5. Negotiating Female Identity in Nineteenth-Century Ireland 69
  13. 6. Women and the Welsh Newspaper Press: The Cambrian News and the Western Mail, 1870–1895 84
  14. Part II: Constructing Modern Girls and Young Women
  15. Introduction 97
  16. 7. Promoting a Do-It-Yourself Spirit: Samuel Beeton’s Young Englishwoman 103
  17. 8. Claiming Medicine as a Profession for Women: The English Woman’s Journal’s Campaign for Female Doctors 120
  18. 9. Encouraging Charitable Work and Membership in the Girls’ Friendly Society through British Girls’ Periodicals 140
  19. 10. ‘Welcome and Appeal for the “Maid of Dundee”’: Constructing the Female Working-Class Bard in Ellen Johnston’s Correspondence Poetry, 1862–1867 153
  20. 11. The Editor of the Period: Alice Corkran, the Girl’s Realm, and the Woman Editor 164
  21. 12. The ‘Most-Talked-Of Creature in the World’: The ‘American Girl’ in Victorian Print Culture 178
  22. Part III: Women and Visual Culture
  23. Introduction 197
  24. 13. Vicarious Pleasures: Photography, Modernity, and Mid-Victorian Domestic Journalism 202
  25. 14. Beauty Advertising and Advice in the Queen and Woman 218
  26. 15. Women of the World: The Lady’s Pictorial and Its Sister Papers 232
  27. 16. Rewriting Fairyland: Isabella Bird and the Spectacle of Nineteenth-Century Japan 256
  28. 17. Victorian Women Wood Engravers: The Case of Clemence Housman 277
  29. Part IV: Making Space for Women
  30. Introduction 301
  31. 18. Women Journalists and Periodical Spaces 306
  32. 19. Making Space for Women’s Work in the Leisure Hour: From Variety to ‘Verity’ 319
  33. 20. Avatars, Pseudonyms, and the Regulation of Affect: Performing and Occluding Gender in the Pall Mall Gazette 336
  34. 21. Gender, Anonymity, and Humour in Women’s Writing for Punch 351
  35. 22. Making Space for Women: The Labour Leader, the Clarion, and the Women’s Column 365
  36. 23. By the Fireside: Margaret Oliphant’s Armchair Commentaries 379
  37. Part V: Constructing Women Readers and Writers
  38. Introduction 393
  39. 24. ‘Afford[ing] me a Place’: Recovering Women Poets in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 1827–1835 399
  40. 25. Constructing the Mass-Market Woman Reader and Writer: Eliza Cook and the Weekly Dispatch, 1836–1850 413
  41. 26. Elizabeth Gaskell and the Habit of Serialisation 429
  42. 27. Gender and Genre in Reviews of the Theological Novel 442
  43. 28. Reading Poet Amy Levy through Victorian Newspapers 456
  44. 29. ‘I simply write it to order’: L. T. Meade, Sisters of Sherlock, and the Strand Magazine 470
  45. Part VI: Intervening in Political Debates
  46. Introduction 483
  47. 30. Brewing Storms of War, Slavery, and Imperialism: Harriet Martineau’s Engagement with the Periodical Press 489
  48. 31. Mary Smith (1822–1889): A Radical Journalist under Many Guises 502
  49. 32. In Time of Disturbance: Political Dissonance and Subversion in Violet Fane’s Contributions to the Lady’s Realm 516
  50. 33. ‘Our Women in Journalism’: African-American Women Journalists and the Circulation of News 528
  51. 34. The Response of the Late Victorian Feminist Press to Same-Sex Desire Controversies 542
  52. 35. Wings and the Woman’s Signal: Reputation and Respectability in Women’s Temperance Periodicals, 1892–1899 555
  53. Notes on Contributors 568
  54. Index 575
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