Kapitel
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Acknowledgements
-
Laurel Forster
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations viii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Introduction: Women’s Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1940s–2010s 1
-
Part I: Publishing Industries and Practices
- 1. Culture Versus Commerce: The Publishing of Feminist Books Since the 1940s 29
- 2. Spare Rib and the Print Culture of Women’s Liberation 46
- 3. The Impact of the Women-Only Publishing Phenomenon on Early Second-Wave Feminism, Literature and Culture 67
- 4. Producing a Lesbian Magazine at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century 83
- 5. ‘Hey, here’s the new way’: Young Women’s Magazines in Times of the Web 3.0 96
-
Part II: Interacting with Readers
- Part II: Interacting with Readers 6. ‘There is a War on. Does She Know?’: Transatlantic Female Stardom and Women’s Wartime Labour in British Film Fan Magazines 117
- 7. ‘The Most Helpful Friends in the World’: Letters Pages, Expertise and Emotion in British Women’s Magazines, c. 1960–80 133
- 8. ‘Everything a Girl Could Ask For’? Fashioning Feminism in Just Seventeen 150
-
Part III: Tastemaking: Arts and Culture
- 9. ‘When is a writer not a writer? When he’s a man’: Women’s Literary Award Culture in Britain 1940–2019 167
- 10. Arena Three Magazine and the Construction of the Middlebrow Lesbian Reader 185
- 11. Always in with the In-Crowd: Vogue and the Cultural Politics of Gender, Race, Class and Taste 200
- 12. ‘Leaps and Bounds’: Feminist Interventions in Scottish Literary Magazine Culture 215
- 13. Promoting Involvement in Performance: Performing Arts Journals and Women Writers, 1945–69 229
-
Part IV: Feminisms and Activisms
- 14. ‘It’s Capitalism, not me sweetheart’: Women’s Activist Magazines on the Left 245
- 15. Women’s Voice, the Rise and Fall of a Socialist-Feminist Newspaper in Britain 1972–82 261
- 16. Spare Rib, Ms. and Reproductive Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Approaches 276
- 17. Digital Feminist Cultures 293
- 18. ‘Alive, practical and different’: Harpies & Quines and Scottish Feminist Print in the 1990s 307
-
Part V: Negotiating Femininities
- 19. ‘Doing Food’ in Vogue 325
- 20. Frank – Frocks, Politics, Lipstick, Handbags, Human Rights, Babies, Gardening, Stilettos and Fridge Magnets 338
- 21. Writing about Mothering and Childcare in the British Women’s Liberation Movement, 1970–85 351
- 22. Beyond Utility: Pushing the Frontiers in Women’s Monthlies: Modern Woman 1943–51 366
- Appendix 385
- Notes on Contributors 406
- Index 411
- Plates 429
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations viii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Introduction: Women’s Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1940s–2010s 1
-
Part I: Publishing Industries and Practices
- 1. Culture Versus Commerce: The Publishing of Feminist Books Since the 1940s 29
- 2. Spare Rib and the Print Culture of Women’s Liberation 46
- 3. The Impact of the Women-Only Publishing Phenomenon on Early Second-Wave Feminism, Literature and Culture 67
- 4. Producing a Lesbian Magazine at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century 83
- 5. ‘Hey, here’s the new way’: Young Women’s Magazines in Times of the Web 3.0 96
-
Part II: Interacting with Readers
- Part II: Interacting with Readers 6. ‘There is a War on. Does She Know?’: Transatlantic Female Stardom and Women’s Wartime Labour in British Film Fan Magazines 117
- 7. ‘The Most Helpful Friends in the World’: Letters Pages, Expertise and Emotion in British Women’s Magazines, c. 1960–80 133
- 8. ‘Everything a Girl Could Ask For’? Fashioning Feminism in Just Seventeen 150
-
Part III: Tastemaking: Arts and Culture
- 9. ‘When is a writer not a writer? When he’s a man’: Women’s Literary Award Culture in Britain 1940–2019 167
- 10. Arena Three Magazine and the Construction of the Middlebrow Lesbian Reader 185
- 11. Always in with the In-Crowd: Vogue and the Cultural Politics of Gender, Race, Class and Taste 200
- 12. ‘Leaps and Bounds’: Feminist Interventions in Scottish Literary Magazine Culture 215
- 13. Promoting Involvement in Performance: Performing Arts Journals and Women Writers, 1945–69 229
-
Part IV: Feminisms and Activisms
- 14. ‘It’s Capitalism, not me sweetheart’: Women’s Activist Magazines on the Left 245
- 15. Women’s Voice, the Rise and Fall of a Socialist-Feminist Newspaper in Britain 1972–82 261
- 16. Spare Rib, Ms. and Reproductive Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Approaches 276
- 17. Digital Feminist Cultures 293
- 18. ‘Alive, practical and different’: Harpies & Quines and Scottish Feminist Print in the 1990s 307
-
Part V: Negotiating Femininities
- 19. ‘Doing Food’ in Vogue 325
- 20. Frank – Frocks, Politics, Lipstick, Handbags, Human Rights, Babies, Gardening, Stilettos and Fridge Magnets 338
- 21. Writing about Mothering and Childcare in the British Women’s Liberation Movement, 1970–85 351
- 22. Beyond Utility: Pushing the Frontiers in Women’s Monthlies: Modern Woman 1943–51 366
- Appendix 385
- Notes on Contributors 406
- Index 411
- Plates 429