Book Clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday LifeUniversity of Chicago Press, 2003 - 254 Seiten Book clubs are everywhere these days. And women talk about the clubs they belong to with surprising emotion. But why are the clubs so important to them? And what do the women discuss when they meet? To answer questions like these, Elizabeth Long spent years observing and participating in women's book clubs and interviewing members from different discussion groups. Far from being an isolated activity, she finds reading for club members to be an active and social pursuit, a crucial way for women to reflect creatively on the meaning of their lives and their place in the social order. |
Inhalt
On the Social Nature of Reading | 1 |
NineteenthCentury White Womens Reading Groups Literary Inspiration and Social Reform | 31 |
Between Past and Present Introductory Reflections on the Changing Nature of Womens Reading Groups | 59 |
Exploring the Social World of Houstons Reading Groups | 74 |
Book Selection Negotiating Group Identity through Literature | 114 |
Conversing with Books Fashioning Subjectivity Dealing with Difference | 144 |
Reading Groups and the Challenge of Mass Communication and Marketing | 189 |
At the End | 219 |
Notes | 225 |
235 | |
247 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Book Clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday Life Elizabeth Long Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2003 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
academic activity African American American Prospect audience Barnes and Noble book discussion book groups book selection bookstore characters choices classics club movement clubwomen contemporary conversation critical cultural authority Doris Lessing eGroups example experience feel feminist fiction formal gender genre hierarchy Houston Houston Public Library ideas identity important individual informal interest interview issues kind Ladies Reading Club Leisure Learning less Library literary clubs literature mean meeting middle-class modern moral mother nineteenth-century novel online groups Oprah's Book Club organized participants percent political question Radway Readers Inc reading group members relationship response Rice University romance Sandra Sarah Grace science fiction Seaholm sense social world structure talk Tattered Cover Texas textual tion traditional understand white women's reading Winfrey woman women Women's Clubs women's groups women's lives women's reading groups writing