Housewives and Citizens: Encouraging Active Citizenship in the Print Media of Housewives' Associations during the Interwar Years

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

New perspectives on women’s print media in interwar Britain by experts in media, literary and cultural history. This collection of new essays recovers and explores a neglected archive of women’s print media and dispels the myth of the interwar decades as a retreat to ‘home and duty’ for women. Women produced magazines and periodicals ranging in forms and appeal from highbrow to popular, private circulation to mass-market and radical to reactionary. The 1920s and 1930s gave rise to a plurality of new challenges and opportunities for women as consumers, workers and citizens, as well as wives and mothers. By restoring to view and analysing the print media which served as the vehicles for debates about the arts, modern life, politics, economics and women’s roles in all these spheres, this collection makes a major contribution to revisionist scholarship on the interwar period.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationWomen's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain: the Interwar Period
Place of PublicationEdinburgh
PublisherEdinburgh University Press
Number of pages528
Edition1
Publication statusPublished - 18 Dec 2017

Keywords

  • Interwar British history
  • Print media history, ,
  • women's organisations
  • gender & media studies

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