This book explores responses to the strangeness and pleasures of modernism and modernity in four commercial British women’s magazines of the interwar period. Through extensive study of interwar Vogue (UK), Eve, Good Housekeeping (UK), and Harper’s Bazaar (UK), Wood uncovers how modernism was received and disseminated by these fashion and domestic periodicals and recovers experimental journalism and fiction within them by an array of canonical and marginalized writers, including Storm Jameson, Rose Macaulay, Gertrude Stein, and Virginia Woolf. The book’s analysis is attentive to text and image and to interactions between editorial, feature, and advertising material. Its detailed survey of these largely neglected magazines reveals how they situated radical aesthetics in relation to modernity’s broader new challenges, diversions, and opportunities for women, and how they approached high modernist art and literature through discourses of fashion and celebrity. Modernism and Modernity in British Women’s Magazines extends recent research into modernism’s circulation through diverse markets and publication outlets and adds to the substantial body of scholarship concerned with the relationship between modernism and popular culture. It demonstrates that commercial women’s magazines subversively disrupted and sustained contemporary hierarchies of high and low culture as well as actively participating in the construction of modernism’s public profile.
Author(s): Alice Wood
Series: (Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 218
Tags: Modernism, Women's Magazines. Feminism
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Figures
1.1 Front Cover, Eve: The Lady’s Pictorial, 13 July 1927
1.2 P. L. Garbutt, ‘Washing Day, 1934 Style’, Good Housekeeping, July 1934
1.3 Front cover, Good Housekeeping, May (Discolouration at Bottom and Right Edge Due to Mildew Damage)
1.4 Advertisement for Harper’s Bazaar in Punch, 2 October 1929
1.5 Front cover, Harper’s Bazaar, August 1934
2.1 Fashion plate, Vogue, Early May 1924
2.2 John Kettelwell, ‘When Diaghileff Calls the Tune’, Eve: The Lady’s Pictorial, 15 June 1927
2.3 Man Ray Photograph beside Beatrice Mathieu, ‘Paris 1935’, Harper’s Bazaar, October 1934
4.1 ‘Mr. T. S. Eliot’, Vogue, Early April 1925
4.2 ‘We Nominate for the Hall of Fame’, Vogue, Late May 1924
4.3 Virginia Woolf, ‘In the Looking Glass’, Harper’s Bazaar, January 1930
4.4 Gertrude Stein, ‘The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas’, Harper’s Bazaar, June 1933
A.1 ‘The Result of Our Reading Questionnaire’, Good Housekeeping, March 1929
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Mediating Modernity
2 Modernism in Fashion
3 Dissident Voices and Feminist Experiment
4 Modernist Reputations
Coda
Appendices
Primary Sources and their Locations
Good Housekeeping’s Reading Questionnaire (1929)
Bibliography
Index