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1

Ferguson, Marjorie. Forever feminine: Women's magazines and the cult of femininity. Aldershot: Gower, 1985.

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2

Aregger, J. Presse, Geschlecht, Politik: Gleichstellungsdiskurs in der Schweizer Presse. Bern: Institut für Medienwissenschaft, Universität Bern, 1998.

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3

Russ, Joanna. The Female Man: A Women's Press Classic. London: The Women's Press, 2002.

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4

Ford-Smith, Honor. Lionheart Gal: Life Stories of Jamaican Women (Women's Press Limited First World Publication). UK: Women's Press (UK), 1994.

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5

Carter, Maureen. Bad press. Chesterfield: Crème de la Crime, 2008.

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6

The women's awakening in Egypt: Culture, society, and the press. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994.

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7

Prasad, Nandini. A pressing matter: Women in press. New Delhi: Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 1992.

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8

Weddon, Willah. Michigan press women: Today and yesterday. Stockbridge, MI: Weddon Press, 1996.

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9

Printing, London College of. The women's press: A profile : DPPS publishing project 1986. London: LCP, 1986.

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10

Aghā, Tawfīq Ḥasan. al- Ṣiḥāfah al-nisāʾīyah fī al-Yaman baʻda thawrat 26 Sibtamber (Aylūl) ʻām 1962 M. al-Imārāt al-ʻArabīyah al-Muttaḥidah: Dār al-Thaqāfah al-ʻArabīyah, 1997.

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11

Kānta, Mīrā. Antararāshṭrīya mahilā daśaka aura Hindī patrakāritā. Naī Dillī: Klāsikala Pabliśiṅga Kampanī, 1994.

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Kānta, Mīrā. Antararāshṭrīya mahilā daśaka aura Hindī patrakāritā. Naī Dillī: Klāsikala Pabliśiṅga Kampanī, 1994.

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13

Full court press. New York: Putnam, 2001.

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14

Schauer, Sandy. New Mexico Press Women history, 1949-1989. [Los Lunas, N.M.]: S. Schauer, 1990.

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15

Timmermann, Marybeth, trans. Press Conference of the International Committee for Women’s Rights. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039003.003.0040.

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Well! We have created the Comité international du droit des femmes [CIDF or International Committee for Women’s Rights] in response to calls from a large number of Iranian women, whose situation and revolt have greatly moved us. We have decided to create this committee with several tasks in mind. The first task: information. It is a matter of becoming informed about the situation of women across the world, a situation which, to a very, very large extent is extremely difficult, painful, and I will even say odious. Therefore, we wish to inform ourselves, in very precise cases, of this situation....
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16

McIlvanney, Siobhán. Figurations of the Feminine in the Early French Women's Press, 1758-1848. Liverpool University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781786941886.001.0001.

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This book examines the origins of the early French women’s press and traces the evolving representations of womanhood that appear over the first ninety years of women’s journals in France. It argues that this critically neglected medium offers a key source of information on French women’s personal and political aspirations by giving us a privileged insight into their everyday lives. The early women’s press represented an important means of allowing women to access and contribute to the key cultural, intellectual and political debates which dominated French society at the time and which directly influenced their position within it. This book highlights the political, feminist potential of this medium written by women for women. Through textual analyses of different ‘generic’ subsections, whether the literary journal, the fashion journal, the domestic press or more explicitly politicised outputs, this book challenges the critical commonplaces that have been applied to the women’s press, both in France and elsewhere. As the first comprehensive study in English of these origins, this book demonstrates the political richness of this medium and the key perspectives it gives us on female self-expression and on the everyday lives of women from across the class spectrum during this key historical period.
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17

Severson, Pernilla. chapter 7 The Politics of Women’s Digital Archives and Its Significance for the History of Journalism. Taylor & Francis, 2021.

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18

Timmermann, Marybeth, trans. Preface to Stories from the French Women’s Liberation Movement. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039003.003.0038.

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In August, 1970, barely six years ago, a few women demonstrated at the Arc de Triomphe in honor of “the wife of the unknown soldier.” And so for the first time the newspapers mentioned the MLF [Mouvement de libération des femmes or French Women’s Liberation Movement]. This name, similar to the American “Women’s Lib,” was given to the movement by the press, and the militants took it on for themselves. Ever since, the MLF has become very well known, or rather very poorly known, because the image propagated about them is one of hysterical shrews and lesbians. The primary merit of this book is to completely refute this cliché....
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19

Shaver, Lisa J. Beyond the Pulpit: Women’s Rhetorical Roles in the Antebellum Religious Press (Composition, Literacy, and Culture). University of Pittsburgh Press, 2012.

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20

Finkelstein, David, ed. The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 2. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424882.001.0001.

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Winner of the 2021 Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize, this is a thorough account of newspaper and periodical press history in Britain and Ireland from 1800 to 1900. It is a unique collection of essays examining nineteenth-century British and Irish journalism and communication history during a key period of change and development. It covers an important point of expansion in periodical and press history across the four nations of Great Britain (England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales), concentrating on cross-border and transnational comparisons and contrasts in nineteenth-century media history and communication. Designed to provide readers with a clear understanding of the current state of research in the field, in addition to an extensive introduction, it includes fifty newly commissioned chapters and case studies exploring a full range of press activity and press genres during this intense period of change. Along with keystone chapters on the economics of the press and periodicals, production processes, readership and distribution networks, and legal frameworks under which the press operated, the book examines a wide range of areas from religious, literary, political and medical press genres to analyses of overseas and émigré press and emerging developments in children’s and women’s press.
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21

Easley, Alexis, Clare Gill, and Beth Rodgers, eds. Women, Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1830s-1900s. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474433907.001.0001.

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This collection of new essays offers in-depth analysis of the multi-faceted relationship between women, periodicals and print culture in Victorian Britain. This period witnessed the proliferation of print culture and the greater availability of periodicals for an increasingly diverse readership and, as a result, the Victorian periodical press has been of keen interest to scholars working across a range of specialist fields in recent decades. No previous volume, however, has offered as rich or as diverse a set of essays on women’s periodicals and women authors, editors, engravers, illustrators and readers of this crucial period in the history of periodical culture. This was, after all, a significant period in women’s history, in which the ‘Woman Question’ dominated public debate, and writers and commentators from a range of perspectives engaged with ideas and ideals about womanhood ranging from the ‘Angel in the House’ to the New Woman. Essays in this collection gather together expertise from leading scholars as well as emerging new voices in order to produce sustained analysis of underexplored periodicals and authors and to reveal in new ways the dynamic and integral relationship between women’s history and print culture in Victorian society.
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22

Chan-Malik, Sylvia. Being Muslim. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479850600.001.0001.

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Being U.S. Muslims: A Cultural History of Women of Color and American Islam offers a previously untold story of Islam in the United States that foregrounds the voices, experiences, and images of women of color in the United States from the early twentieth century to the present. Until the late 1960s, the majority of Muslim women in the U.S.—as well as almost all U.S. Muslim women who appeared in the American press or popular culture, were African American. Thus, the book contends that the lives and labors of African American Muslim women have—and continue to—forcefully shaped the meanings and presence of American Islam, and are critical to approaching issues confronting Muslim women in the contemporary U.S. At the heart of U.S. Muslim women’s encounters with Islam, the volume demonstrates, is a desire for gender justice that is rooted in how issues of race and religion have shaped women’s daily lives. Women of color’s ways of “being U.S. Muslims” have been consistently forged against commonsense notions of racial, gendered, and religious belonging and citizenship. From narratives of African American women who engage Islam as a form of social protest, through intersections of “Islam” and “feminism” in the media, and into contemporary expressions of racial and gender justice in U.S. Muslim communities, Being U.S. Muslims demonstrates that it is this continual againstness— which the book names affective insurgency—that is the central hall marks of U.S. Muslim women’s lives.
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23

Clay, Catherine. Time and Tide. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474418188.001.0001.

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This book reconstructs the first two decades of the feminist magazine Time and Tide, founded in 1920 by Lady Margaret Rhondda and other women who had been involved in the women’s suffrage movement. Unique in establishing itself as the only female-run general-audience intellectual weekly in what press historians describe as the ‘golden age’ of the weekly review, Time and Tide both challenged persistent prejudices against women’s participation in public life and played an instrumental role in redefining women’s gender roles and identities in the interwar period. Drawing on extensive new archival research the book recovers the contributions to this magazine of both well- and lesser-known British women writers, editors, critics and journalists and explores a cultural dialogue about literature, politics and the arts that took place beyond the parameters of modernist ‘little magazines’. Offering insights into the history and workings of this periodical that no one has dealt with to date, the book makes a major contribution to the history of women’s writing and feminism in Britain between the two world wars. The book is organised chronologically in three parts, tracing Time and Tide’s evolution from its ‘Early Years’ as an overtly feminist magazine (1920-28), to its ‘Expansion’ and rebranding in the late 1920s as a more general-audience weekly review (1928-35), and, finally, to its ‘Reorientation’ in the mid-1930s in response to a world in crisis (1935-39).
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24

Lewandowska, Małgorzata J. Grazia. Consigli che hanno formato le italiane. Un’analisi del discorso. University of Warsaw Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.9788323555841.

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The present volume is the result of many years of research on the letters published in the agony column of Italian weekly magazine "Grazia". The author aims to show the evolution of women's social roles and of the models of femininity in the discourse of press and advice-giving in 20th century Italy, as well as to present the diachronic changes which occurred in the letters themselves. The analysis provides information on women’s interests and problems, the type of content promoted by the magazine and the solutions suggested by the agony aunts, drawing the reader’s attention to the constantly evolving relationship between sender and recipient, symptomatic of the changes that concerned not only the readers of female magazines, but Italian society in general.
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25

Gallon, Kim T. Pleasure in the News. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043222.001.0001.

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Pleasure in the News: African American Readership and Sexuality in the Black Press is an examination of the coverage of sexuality in the Black Press between 1925 and 1940, otherwise known as the interwar period in the United States. In the book, Kim Gallon argues that the Black Press made sexuality a major topic of news to appease African American readers’ imagined desires for sexual coverage. In so doing, Gallon argues that Black Press coverage produced a number of black sexual public spheres that offered early-twentieth-century African Americans opportunities to debate and discuss particular sexual topics. In their simplest form, black sexual public spheres were discursive arenas in which readers debated and discussed sexual matters. They also served as mechanisms for readers to critique and sound off on a wide range of issues, including respectability, interracial marriage, divorce, the sexualization of women’s bodies, and homosexuality within early-twentieth-century black communities. Overall, Pleasure in the News provides an expanded understanding of the ways readers interacted with the Black Press and representations of sexuality.
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26

Zanoni, Elizabeth. “A Wife in Waiting”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040955.003.0004.

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Family reunification provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (the McCarran-Walter Act) allowed ethnic women, for the first time, to sponsor the migration of their alien husbands and children outside the limited quota slots for Southern and Eastern Europeans. This chapter explores advice columns in New York’s Il Progresso Italo-Americano to examine the gendered implications of the 1952 act on postwar Italian migration. The 1952 act granted Italian women a new and controversial visibility in the Italian-language press and in the larger ethnic community as instigators of immigration. During the 1950s, this chapter argues, advice columns about the 1952 act turned into platforms for both exalting and policing Italian women’s roles in initiating postwar migrations, marriages, and families.
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27

Davis, Angela Y. Women, Race and Class (Women's Press Classics). Women's Press Ltd,The, 2001.

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28

Steiner, Linda, Carolyn Kitch, and Brooke Kroeger, eds. Front Pages, Front Lines. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043109.001.0001.

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This book addresses the role of media, particularly periodicals, in the American women’s suffrage movement, and in public understandings of the campaign for a Constitutional amendment enfranchising women. Chapters deal with the rhetoric of pro- and antisuffrage activists as covered in the mainstream regional and national press; several chapters deal with suffragists’ own periodicals, as well as with other non-mainstream periodicals, including the black press and socialist and radical periodicals. These new studies offer fresh perspectives on relatively familiar suffrage narratives while exploring lesser-known aspects of the roles of journalism, publicity, visual communication, and external alliances with organizations and individuals. Taken collectively, the chapters clarify intersections of suffrage ideas with other social and political movements as well as differences by geography and culture. The essays are marked by attention to the movement’s long-term implications; to contemporary concepts such as social movement and countermovement strategies, status conflict, and the public sphere; and by sensitivity to race, class, and regional politics. As the historiography offered here makes clear, these issues were largely ignored in the first wave of suffrage research.
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29

Chamberlen, Anastasia. Embodying Punishment. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198749240.001.0001.

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This book offers a theoretical and empirical exploration of women’s lived experiences of imprisonment in England. It puts forward a feminist critique of the prison, and argues that prisoner bodies are central to our understanding of modern punishment, and particularly of women’s survival and resistance during and after prison. Drawing on a feminist phenomenological framework informed by a serious engagement with scholars such as Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Simone de Beauvoir, Erwin Goffman, Michel Foucault, Sandra Lee Bartky, and Tori Moi, Embodying Punishment revisits and expands the literature on the pains of imprisonment, and offers an interdisciplinary examination of the embodiment and identities of prisoners and former prisoners to press the need for a body-aware approach to criminology and penology. The book develops this argument through a qualitative study with prisoners and former prisoners by discussing themes such as: the perception of the prison through time, space, smells, and sounds; the change of prisoner bodies; the presentation of self in and after prison, including the centrality of appearance and prison dress in the management of prisoner and ex-prisoner identities; and a range of coping strategies adopted during and after imprisonment, including prison food, drug misuse, and a case study on women’s self-injuring practices. Embodying Punishment brings to the fore and critically analyses longstanding and urgent problems surrounding women’s multifaceted oppression through imprisonment, including matters of discriminatory and gendered treatment as well as issues around penal harm, and argues for an experientially grounded critique of punishment.
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30

Davies, Alicia. The Women's Press Ltd. 1988.

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31

Cox, Dee, Gerrilyn Smith, and Jacqui Saradjian. Women and Self-harm (The Women's Press Handbook Series). Women's Press Ltd,The, 1999.

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32

Roberts, Michele. The Visitation (Women's Press Classics). Women's Press, Limited, The, 2002.

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33

Perkins, Gilman Charlotte. Herland (A Women's Press Classic). Women's Press Ltd,The, 2001.

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34

Riley, Joan. Unbelonging (A Women's Press Classic). Women's Press, Limited, The, 2003.

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35

1943-, Burt Elizabeth V., ed. Women's press organizations, 1881-1999. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 2000.

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36

Smyth, J. E. Nobody's Girl Friday. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190840822.001.0001.

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Looking back on her career in 1977, Bette Davis remembered with pride, “Women owned Hollywood for twenty years.” She had a point. During the 1930s and 1940s, the press claimed Hollywood was a generation or two ahead of the rest of the United States in terms of gender equality and employment, with women constituting 40% of film industry employees. Mary C. McCall Jr. was elected president of the Screen Writers Guild three times, and a quarter of all screenwriters were women. Barbara McLean was known as “Hollywood’s Editor-in-Chief.” She and her colleague Margaret Booth supervised their studios’ feature outputs and could order retakes on any director’s work. One woman ran MGM behind the scenes. Over a dozen women worked as producers of major feature films. Edith Head told American women what to wear for decades. Executive Anita Colby, “ ‘the Face with a brain to match,” told them how to do everything else. But historians, critics, and the public have largely forgotten this period and persist in seeing studio-era Hollywood as a place where the only careers open to women were passive, pretty directors’ dummies on-screen or underpaid, anonymous secretaries off-screen. This book tells another story of a “golden age” for women’s employment in the film industry and of Hollywood’s ranks of powerful organization women.
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37

Sexual Violence: The Reality for Women (The Women's Press Handbook Series). 2nd ed. Women's Press, Limited, The, 1999.

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38

Conley, Carolyn A. Debauched, Desperate, Deranged. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198863038.001.0001.

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Contemporary studies have concluded that women are far less likely to kill than men and that when women do kill, they do so within the family. This book examines the evolution of this pattern in homicide trials in London from the late seventeenth century until just before the First World War. Obviously, the number of prosecutions for homicide is not the same as the number of homicides committed. Which deaths were considered homicides and in what circumstances women were culpable illustrate profound changes in the prevailing assumptions about women. The outcomes of trials and the portrayals of these women in the press illuminate changes in perceptions of women’s status and their physical and mental limitations. This book breaks new ground in that the existing studies of gender and homicide have been narrowly focused chronologically. Though the scholarship for the early modern period is rich, the divide between early modern and modern is rarely crossed. A longer time frame makes it possible to discern which trends are brief anomalies and which represent significant change or continuity. Rather than a simple matter of patriarchal control, gender expectations fluctuated widely over time. Early modern women who killed were wicked, eighteenth-century female killers had succumbed to passion, nineteenth-century women were vulnerable to external threats to their roles as wives and mothers, while early twentieth-century women were most often seen as victims of their own biological shortcomings.
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39

Dangarembga, Tsitsi. Nervous Conditions (A Women's Press Classic). Women's Press Ltd,The, 2001.

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40

Lawrence, Marilyn. The Anorexic Experience (Women's Press Handbook). 3rd ed. Trafalgar Square Publishing, 2001.

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41

Chopin, Kate. The Awakening (A Women's Press Classic). Women's Press, Ltd. (UK), 2002.

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42

Where Echoes Live (Women's Press Crime). Women's Press Ltd,The, 1992.

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43

Livingston, Mrs C. M., and Pansy. Divers Women (Dodo Press). Dodo Press, 2007.

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44

Chadwick, Andrew. Donald Trump, the 2016 U.S. Presidential Campaign, and the Intensification of the Hybrid Media System. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190696726.003.0011.

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Chapter 10 extends the conceptual framework to the extraordinary 2016 U.S. election, showing how Donald Trump’s rise and Hillary Clinton’s downfall were enabled by key aspects of the hybrid media system. The chapter deciphers the main components of Trump’s digital campaign, in particular its shift toward an intensive Facebook advertising strategy and its use of targeted advertising to try to reduce turnout among potential Democrat voters. It shows how Trump was able to translate his celebrity capital into political capital through the use of social media, particularly Twitter, to influence press and television coverage. Chapter 10 also discusses how hybrid media played a decisive role in the Women’s March, the biggest single-day protest in U.S. history. The march, when integrated with the actions of professional fact-checking journalists, became an important part of the counter-inauguration that subverted Trump’s ability to set the agenda during his first week in office.
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45

Plock, Vike Martina. Uniforms and Uniformity: Virginia Woolf. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474427418.003.0006.

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In foregrounding fashion’s involvement with nationalist and corporatist political movements, this chapter on Virginia Woolf focuses on her 1930s writing—especially The Years (1937) and Three Guineas (1938), as well as related material in the Monks House Papers—to analyze Woolf’s engagement with fascist interventions in identity politics. In focusing on the depiction of women’s sartorial items in her writing, it shows how Woolf examines the relationship between the individual and the collective that fascist movements threatened to restructure by introducing increasingly uniform clothing. But while she revealed the dangers inherent in following regulations that aimed to standardize behavior and clothing, Woolf, this chapter shows, simultaneously embraced other forms of uniformity: her own rise to literary stardom in the 1930s, advanced by the Hogarth Press’ introduction of Uniform Editions of her work, provides a striking counterpoint to her critique of the standardized cultural productions of her time.
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46

1957-, Russo Ann, and Kramarae Cheris, eds. The Radical women's press of the 1850s. London: Routledge, 1990.

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47

Muller, Marcia. The Shape of Dread (Women's Press Crime). Women's Press Ltd,The, 1992.

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48

Muller, Marcia. Trophies and Dead Things (Women's Press Crime). Women's Press Ltd,The, 1992.

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49

1957-, Russo Ann, and Kramarae Cheris, eds. The Radical women's press of the 1850s. London: Routledge, 1991.

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50

Miller, Isabel. Patience and Sarah (A Women's Press Classic). Women's Press Ltd,The, 2007.

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