The Edwardian woman

by Duncan Crow

Hardcover, 1978

Status

Available

Publication

St. Martin's Press (1978), 231 pages

Description

Covering the period from the beginning of the twentieth century to the outbreak of the First World War, this entertaining account describes the lives of women in all classes of society: the entertainments they watched, the clothes they wore, their education and the effect it had on women's magazines, the work they did and the rise of the 'office' as the Mecca for working women. The author also considers the changing attitudes to contraception and sex. This period, particularly its latter part, saw the rejection of old leaders and old habits. In politics, in the trade unions, and especially in the women's movement, the refusal of a so-called reforming government to accede to moderate demands resulted in the rise to power of militants. While primarily about Britain the book also studies women in Germany, France and the United States, offering a particularly revealing account of the stories of women, famous and not, with a lucid, readable outline of the society in which they lived and the social changes that affected their lives and to which they themselves contributed.… (more)

Rating

(1 rating; 3)

User reviews

LibraryThing member RubyScarlett
This isn't a bad book but it has major flaws. I picked this up thinking it'd cover every aspect of a woman's life in the Edwardian Era (the title is vague enough to allow for this interpretation) and it's such a narrow study that it left me really disappointed and hungry for more. Crow's topic is
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really A Few Select Aspects of a Rich English Woman's Life in Edwardian England. This isn't a book I would recommend as a starting point on the era or you'll soon be lost, its intent is more to draw a few portraits of carefully selected women who, according to Crow, embody different aspects of women's lives in England at the beginning of the 20th century. I took a few notes and it's not an uninteresting book by any means - if you're interested in the period, it's a really good read, it just fails to fill any particular gap as it's neither comprehensive nor earth-shattering. Sadly, another one of its flaws is the absence of any bibliography - I would have loved to dig deeper into some topics that are simply mentioned by Crow here but he never gives you the opportunity to do so. Besides, Crow fails to show how Edwardian women's lives differed from their Victorian ancestors and keeps referring to another work of his, The Victorian Woman, in almost every chapter. This is a mistake - if you choose to write a book on a topic, at least justify why it's different from what you've done before, don't keep referring to another work in a cheap attempt to have us buy one more book. I shall be reading a general overview of the period next, and then I'll try and find more books on Edwardian women specifically, though they seem quite scarce.
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Language

Original publication date

1978

Physical description

231 p.; 8.6 inches

ISBN

0312239122 / 9780312239121
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