Images of Ourselves: Women with Disabilities Talking

Routledge & Kegan Paul Books (1981)
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Abstract

Girls learn about "femininity" from childhood onwards, first through their relationships in the family, and later from their teachers and peers. Using sources which vary from diaries to Inspector’s reports, this book studies the socialization of middle- and working-class girls in late Victorian and early-Edwardian England. It traces the ways in which schooling at all social levels at this time tended to reinforce lessons in the sexual division of labour and patterns of authority between men and women, which girls had already learned at home. Considering the social anxieties that helped to shape the curriculum offered to working-class girls through the period 1870-1920, the book goes on to focus on the emergence of a social psychology of adolescent girlhood in the early-twentieth century and finally, examines the relationship between feminism and girls’ education.

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Citations of this work

Femininity and its Discontents.Jacqueline Rose - 1983 - Feminist Review 14 (1):5-21.
Femininity and its Discontents.Jacqueline Rose - 2005 - Feminist Review 80 (1):24-43.
On becoming a hag: gender, ageing and abjection.Susan Pickard - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (2):157-173.
'The Nation's' Girlhood and the Call to Service in England, 1939-50.Penny Tinkler - 1997 - European Journal of Women's Studies 4 (3):353-377.

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