Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton's New York

Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton's New York

by Maureen E. Montgomery
Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton's New York

Displaying Women: Spectacles of Leisure in Edith Wharton's New York

by Maureen E. Montgomery

eBook

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Overview

Displaying Women explores the role of women in the representation of leisure in turn-of-the-century New York. To see and be seen--on Fifth Avenue and Broadway, in Central Park, and in the fashionable uptown hotels and restaurants--was one of the fundamental principles in the display aesthetic of New York's fashionable society.

Maureen E. Montgomery argues for a reconsideration of the role of women in the bourgeois elite in turn-of-the-century America. By contrasting multiple images of women drawn from newspapers, magazines, private correspondence, etiquette manuals and the New York fiction of Edith Wharton, Henry James and others, she offers a convincing antidote to the long-standing tendency in women's history to overlook women whose class affiliations have put them in a position of power.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781134952861
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 04/29/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Maureen E. Montgomery is Chair of the Department of American Studies at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Chapter 1 The Social Calendar; Chapter 2 The Female World of Ritual and Etiquette; Chapter 3 Interiors and Façades; Chapter 4 Women Abroad; Chapter 5 “Optical Excursions”; Chapter 6 Women in the Public Eye; conclusion Spectacle and Surveillance;

What People are Saying About This

Ellen Carol DuBois

Finally! A study of the truly elite women of the turn of the century metropolis, which uses all the best new tools of cultural studies and gender analysis. Maureen Montgomery has given us a crucial element for our understanding of class relations and of femininity at the dawn of the twentieth century.

Louis Auchincloss

The leisure world of society met in Edith Wharton's New York may have disappeared as completely as Schliemann's Troy or Imperial Rome, but it is brought vividly to life by Maureen Montgomery in this fascinating study of a rigidly and artifically ordered culture that brought women curiously unexpected advantages as well as deadly drawbacks.

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