The Making of the 'new Woman': Narratives in the Popular Illustrated Press From the Ottoman Empire To the New Republic (1890-1920s)
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Date
2019
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge Journals
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
The genre of social narrative was prominent in the printed press of the Ottoman Empire to the early Republic of Turkey (1850s-1920s). The ideological narratives disseminated through the periodical press were influential in the establishment of a new, changing society and social space. Starting in the second half of the nineteenth century, both male and female writers debated the position of women within the changing public setting. Various articles by various authors with various aims constructed multiple imaginations of the 'new woman' by the 1930s. The shifting concepts of womanhood entered the public debate with articles on the modern woman versus the women of the past and discussions on what makes a modern woman. Articles in newspapers and political magazines of the era debated the equality of the new woman in the public sphere. In contrast to them, popular almanacs brought the discussion of womanhood into the domestic space. Turkish-language almanacs contained effectual narratives of the culture of domesticity that helped to imagine and establish multiple modes of new womanhood interwoven with the notion of the home. This article attempts to trace the ideas of the "new woman" and the culture of domesticity that were used particularly in the illustrations found in three different Turkish-language almanacs specifically aimed at female readers in the 1920s, by discussing them as visual narratives.
Description
Keywords
Modernity, Home, Illustrated journals, Almanacs, New woman, Gender, Almanacs, Illustrated journals, Gender, Modernity, Home, New woman
Fields of Science
05 social sciences, 0211 other engineering and technologies, 0507 social and economic geography, 02 engineering and technology
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q
Q4

OpenCitations Citation Count
1
Source
Early Popular Visual Culture
Volume
17
Issue
2
Start Page
156
End Page
177
PlumX Metrics
Citations
Scopus : 2
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Mendeley Readers : 7
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