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