Nationalising femininity : culture, sexuality, and British cinema in the Second World War

Bibliographic Information

Nationalising femininity : culture, sexuality, and British cinema in the Second World War

edited by Christine Gledhill and Gillian Swanson

Manchester University Press, 2011

  • : pbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

"First published by Manchester University Press 1996"--T.p. verso

"First digital paperback edition published 2011"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [285]-297) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Case studies examine competing definitions of feminism, contoured by The Second World War, circulating in cinema, women's magazines, social policies, government pamphlets, fashion, and broadcasting -- .

Table of Contents

1. Prologue: mobile femininity PART ONE Mobile women: change and regulation 2. 'The girl that makes the thing . . . ': discourses of women and work in the Second World War 3. 'Bombs don't discriminate!' Women's political activism in the Second World War 4. 'So much money and so little to spend it on': morale, consumption and sexuality 5. Good wives and moral lives: marriage and divorce 1937-51 PART TWO Fashioning the national self: cultural practices and representations 6. 'Pulling our weight in the call-up of women': class and gender in British radio in the Second World War 7. Putting the black women in the frame: Una Marson and the West Indian challenge to British national identity 8. Women's magazines: times of war and management of the self in Woman's Own 9. The Family Firm restored: newsreel coverage of the British monarchy 1936-45 10. Fashioning the feminine: dress, appearance and femininity in wartime Britain PART THREE Nationialising femininity: the case of British cinema 11. Cinema Culture and femininity in the 1930s 12. The years of total war: propaganda and entertainment 13. 'An abundance of understatement': documentary, melodrama and romance 14. Disguises and betrayals: negotiating nationality and femininity in three wartime films 15. The female audience: mobile women and married ladies 16. Stepping out or out of step? Austerity, affluence and femininity in two post-war films 17. Two weddings and two funerals: the problem of the post-war woman -- .

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