Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > From 1900
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Working Girls - Fiction, Sexuality, and Modernity (Hardcover)
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Working Girls - Fiction, Sexuality, and Modernity (Hardcover)
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Working Girls: Fiction, Sexuality, and Modernity investigates the
significance of a new form of sexual identity at the end of the
nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century. Young women of
the lower-middle and working classes were increasingly abandoning
domestic service in favour of occupations of contested propriety.
They inspired both moral unease and erotic fascination. Working
Girls considers representations of four highly glamorised yet
controversial types of women worker: telegraphists and typists (in
newly-feminised offices), shop assistants (in the new department
stores), and barmaids (in the new 'gin palaces' of major British
cities). Economically emancipated (more or less) and liberated
(more or less) from the protection and constraints of home and
family, shop-girls, barmaids, typists, and telegraphists became
mass media sensations. They energised a wide range of
late-Victorian and Modernist fiction. This study will bring
late-Victorian and Modernist British writers into intimate
conversation with a substantial new archive of ephemeral sources
often regarded as remote from high art and its concerns: popular
fiction; music hall and musical comedy; beauty pageants and
fairground exhibitions; visual art and early film; careers manuals;
magazine and periodical journalism; moral reform crusades, Royal
Commissions, and attempts at protective legislation. Working Girls
argues that these seductive yet perilous young women helped writers
negotiate anxieties about the state of literary culture in the
United Kingdom. Crucially, they preoccupy novelists who were
themselves beleaguered by anxieties over cultural capital, the
shifting pressures of the literary marketplace, or controversies
about the morality of fiction (often leading to the threat of
censorship). In articulating questions about sexual integrity,
Working Girls articulate often submerged questions about textual
integrity and the role of the modern novel.
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