Brunswick Books
Home • Ordering • Contact Us • About Us • Independent Booksellers • Catalogues • Publisher Services • Events & Information • Shopping Cart

Find Books:

by Subject Category
  • African Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Biographies
  • Business
  • Canadian Studies
  • Class
  • Community/Urban Studies
  • Criminology / Law
  • Cultural Studies
  • Development Studies
  • Disability Studies
  • Ecology/Environment
  • Economics
  • Education
  • Family Studies
  • Fiction
  • Food/Food Security
  • Gender Studies
  • Gerontology
  • Globalization
  • Health /Health Care
  • History
  • Immigration
  • Imperialism
  • Indigenous Studies
  • International Studies
  • Labour Studies
  • Latin America
  • Literature
  • Media
  • Middle East
  • Mothering
  • Music
  • Peace Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Poetry
  • Political Economy
  • Politics
  • Public Policy
  • Queer Studies
  • Racism/Race Relations
  • Religion Studies
  • Research
  • Short Stories
  • Social / Political Theory
  • Social Movements
  • Social Work
  • Socialist Register
  • Sociology
  • Technology
  • Women’s Studies
  • Young Adult
Featured Books Forthcoming

Brunswick Books is the new name of Fernwood Books.  For over 35 years we have been providing books from independent and progressive publishers.

Glamour
  • Publisher: Zed Books
  • ISBN: 9781848138612
  • Price: $20.95 CAD
  • Publication Date: 2010
  • Rights: Canada
  • Pages: 288

Buy Now!

Examination Copy

Professors/Instructors in Canada: We will provide examination copies of our books for consideration as course texts. We do reserve the right to limit examination copy requests and/or to provide books on a pre-payment or approval basis.

Request Exam Copy

Glamour

Women, History, Feminism

Carol Dyhouse

How do we understand “Glamour”? Has it empowered women or turned them into objects? Once associated with modernity and the cutting edge, is it entirely bound up with nostalgia and tradition?

This unique and fascinating book tells the story of glamour. It explores the changing meanings of the word, its relationship to femininity and fashion, and its place in twentieth century social history. Using a rich variety of sources–from women’s magazines and film to social surveys and life histories–Carol Dyhouse examines with wit and insight the history and meaning of costume, cosmetics, perfume and fur.

Dyhouse disentangles some of the arguments surrounding femininity, appearance and power, directly addressing feminist concerns. The book explores historical contexts in which glamour served as an expression of desire in women and an assertion of entitlement to the pleasures of affluence, finally arguing that glamour can’t simply be dismissed as oppressive, or as male fantasy, but can carry celebratory meanings for women.

”In Glamour: Women, History, Feminism, Carol Dyhouse has written a study of the history of the conception of glamour in the twentieth century that is sprightly, provocative, and penetrating. She adds greatly to our understanding of a phenomenon that has been central to women’s attitudes toward themselves, as they use the products of the beauty industry to both standardize their looks and to express cultural rebellion. This work will be interesting to both scholars and general readers alike.”–Lois Banner, Professor , History and Gender Studies, University of Southern California, Author of American Beauty.

Contents

Introduction
1. The origins of glamour: demi-monde, modernity, ‘It’
2. Hollywood glamour
3. Dreams, desires and spending
4. Princesses, tarts and cheesecake
5. Revolutions
6. Glamazons, grunge and bling
7. Perspectives and reflections: glamour for all?
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgements, Picture Credits
Index

About the Author

Carol Dyhouse is a social historian. Her research has focused on gender, education and the pattern of women’s lives in nineteenth and twentieth century Britain. Her books include Girls Growing Up in late Victorian and Edwardian England (1981); Feminism and the Family in England, 1890-1939, (1989); No Distinction of Sex? Women in British Universities (1995); and Students: A Gendered History (2006). An interest in clothing and material culture, and the ways in which these relate to changing ideas about femininity, led to work on the subject of glamour, its controversial status within feminism, and its meanings to women in history. Carol Dyhouse is currently a Research Professor in History at the University of Sussex.


Home • Ordering • Contact Us • About Us • Independent Booksellers • Catalogues • Publisher Services • Events • Shopping Cart

Website by Triggers & Sparks | Contact Us: info@brunswickbooks.ca / 416-703-3598