
Contents
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Women’s Literary Journalism Between the Wars Women’s Literary Journalism Between the Wars
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The Authority of the Amateur Critic The Authority of the Amateur Critic
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Book Lovers’ Shared Literary Heritage Book Lovers’ Shared Literary Heritage
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The Pleasure in Reading The Pleasure in Reading
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The Woman Reader as Social and Political Agent The Woman Reader as Social and Political Agent
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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18 Y Gymraes (The Welshwoman): Ambivalent Domesticity in Women’s Welsh-language Interwar Print Media
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4 Clemence Dane’s Literary Criticism for Good Housekeeping: Cultivating a ‘Small, Comical, Lovable, Eternal Public’ of Book Lovers
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Published:January 2018
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Abstract
This chapter situates Clemence Dane’s literary criticism for Good Housekeeping within the context of interwar women’s literary journalism and discusses her program for the cultural, social, and civic empowerment of women readers. It argues that, as she modelled a holistic reading pleasure that encompassed sensuous and intellectual experience alike, and as she emphasised readers’ responsibility to bring about good books, Dane’s monthly essays both countered cultural images of indiscriminately consuming women readers and provided the structure for ongoing instruction in literary tradition. The chapter demonstrates that Dane’s middlebrow literary criticism engaged in dialogue with and challenged modernist and academic literary criticism, especially through its conception of a literary heritage that both enhanced enjoyment of literature and empowered ordinary readers to evaluate it. Finally, the chapter argues that Dane’s model of pleasurable reading as a gateway to cultural, social, and political benefits helped to shape a progressive modernity for women.
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