1. Baldasty G.J. The Commercialization of News in the Nineteenth Century. Madison, 1992.
2. Blanchard M.W. Boundaries and the Victorian Body: Aesthetic Fashion in Gilded Age America // The American Historical Review. Vol. 100. № 1. 1995. P. 21–50.
3. Boorstin D. The Americans: The Democratic Experience. New York, 1974.
4. Dasler Johnson W. Cultural Rhetorics of Women's Corsets // Rhetoric Review. Vol. 20. № 3–4. 2001. P. 203–233.
5. Davies M. Corsets and Conception: Fashion and Demographic Trends in the Nineteenth Century // Comparative Studies in Society and History. Vol. 24. № 4. 1982. P. 611–641.
6. Fowler R. “On Not Knowing Greek:” The Classics and the Woman of Letters // The Classical Journal. Vol. 78. № 4. 1983. P. 337–349
7. Mattingly C. Appropriate [ing] Dress: Women's Rhetorical Style in Nineteenth-Century America. Carbondale, 2002.
8. Morantz R. M. Making Women Modern: Middle Class Women and Health Reform in 19th century America // Journal of Social History. Vol. 10. № 4. 1977. P. 490–507.
9. Peiss K. Hope in a Jar: The Making of America's Beauty Culture. Philadelphia, 2011.
10. Schudson M. Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers. New York, 1981.
11. Schweitzer M. “The Mad Search for Beauty”: Actresses' Testimonials, the Cosmetics Industry, and the “Democratization of Beauty” // The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Vol. 4. № 3. 2005. P. 255–292.
12. Shannon L.E. Monuments to the “New Woman”: Public Art and Female Image-Building in America, 1876–1940: Academic Dissertation. Iowa City, 2013.
13. Spring J. Educating the Consumer-Citizen: A History of the IIIriage of Schools, Advertising, and Media. Mahwah, 2003.
14. Verbrugge M.H. Able-Bodied Womanhood: Personal Health and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Boston. New York, 1988.
15. Winterer C. Victorian Antigone: Classicism and Women's Education in America, 1840–1900 // American Quarterly. Vol. 53. № 1. 2001. P. 70–93.
Комментарии
Сообщения не найдены