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Looking Good: College Women and Body Image, 1875-1930 (Gender Relations in the American Experience)

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Management number 233432981 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$10.11 Model Number 233432981
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Winner of the Bridgewater State College Class of 1950 Distinguished Faculty Research Award Toward the end of the nineteenth century, as young women began entering college in greater numbers than ever before, physicians and social critics charged that campus life posed grave hazards to the female constitution and women's reproductive health. "A girl could study and learn," Dr. Edward Clarke warned in his widely read 1873 book Sex in Education, "but she could not do all this and retain uninjured health, and a future secure from neuralgia, uterine disease, hysteria, and other derangements of the nervous system." For half a century, ideas such as Dr. Clarke's framed the debate over a woman's place in higher education almost exclusively in terms of her body and her health.For historian Margaret A. Lowe, this obsession offers one of the clearest expressions of the social and cultural meanings given to the female body between 1875 and 1930. At the same time, the "college girl" was a novelty that tested new ideas about feminine beauty, sexuality, and athleticism. In Looking Good, Lowe examines the ways in which college women at three quite different institutions—Cornell University, Smith College, and Spelman College—regarded their own bodies in this period. Contrasting white and black students, single-sex and coeducational schools, secular and religious environments, and Northern and Southern attitudes, Lowe draws on student diaries, letters, and publications; institutional records; and accounts in the popular press to examine the process by which new, twentieth-century ideals of the female body took hold in America. Read more

ASIN B07DFP6MM7
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-1421401812
Language English
File size 2.8 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 222 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Part of series Gender Relations in the American Experience
Publication date June 12, 2003
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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