The changing face of the female smoker, from the lady smokers of
the late nineteenth century to the lone mother of the late
twentieth century, suggests that the history of smoking among women
is not just about the assimilation of women into a male practice,
but about the changing, and varied, circumstances of women's lives.
In this innovative study, Elliott articulates the way in which the
history of smoking among women raises complex questions about the
construction of female identities in relation to smoking, and the
implications of this for understanding smoking among women as a
medical and public health problem. In addressing these questions,
Elliott uses a variety of source material, from popular magazines
to films to medical discourse, to map the history of smoking among
women on to changing understandings of gender and social
expectations of women over the twentieth century at a societal and
an individual level.
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