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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schulz, Constance B.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED250221
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author Schulz, Constance B.
author_facet Schulz, Constance B.
Schulz, Constance B.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Images of Women in American Stereographs, 1870-1920. Schulz, Constance B. American Studies Employed Women Females Feminism Humor Marriage Mothers Sex Stereotypes Social Science Research Womens History American stereographs of the late 19th and early 20th centuries are discussed in the context of the Victorian stylized stereotype of women which they so graphically capture. Stereograph cards and early motion pictures from the Library of Congress were the major sources studied. Stereograph cards were as ubiquitous in their time as television is today. The images popularized in stereograph cards, and later adopted by the more public medium of the movies, made possible the visual realization of America's most pervasive and enduring stereotypes. The Victorian views of women emphasized a stereotype of domesticity, passivity, moral superiority, sexual purity, and motherly sanctity and sacrifice. Underlying this stereotype, however, was another perception of women as subtly sexual, having a sensuous underside to their nature that they used in a calculated way to appeal to the baser instincts in men. Borrowing from both of these perceptions, the stereotype of women illustrated in the stereograph cards can be described as both that of "Virgin and Vamp." Specific examples are discussed, and reproductions of the slides originally shown with the paper are appended. (RM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED250221
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1984
record_format eric
spellingShingle Images of Women in American Stereographs, 1870-1920.
Schulz, Constance B.
American Studies
Employed Women
Females
Feminism
Humor
Marriage
Mothers
Sex Stereotypes
Social Science Research
Womens History
Images of Women in American Stereographs, 1870-1920. Schulz, Constance B. American Studies Employed Women Females Feminism Humor Marriage Mothers Sex Stereotypes Social Science Research Womens History American stereographs of the late 19th and early 20th centuries are discussed in the context of the Victorian stylized stereotype of women which they so graphically capture. Stereograph cards and early motion pictures from the Library of Congress were the major sources studied. Stereograph cards were as ubiquitous in their time as television is today. The images popularized in stereograph cards, and later adopted by the more public medium of the movies, made possible the visual realization of America's most pervasive and enduring stereotypes. The Victorian views of women emphasized a stereotype of domesticity, passivity, moral superiority, sexual purity, and motherly sanctity and sacrifice. Underlying this stereotype, however, was another perception of women as subtly sexual, having a sensuous underside to their nature that they used in a calculated way to appeal to the baser instincts in men. Borrowing from both of these perceptions, the stereotype of women illustrated in the stereograph cards can be described as both that of "Virgin and Vamp." Specific examples are discussed, and reproductions of the slides originally shown with the paper are appended. (RM)
title Images of Women in American Stereographs, 1870-1920.
topic American Studies
Employed Women
Females
Feminism
Humor
Marriage
Mothers
Sex Stereotypes
Social Science Research
Womens History
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED250221