Call#: Van Pelt Library HQ1410 .M63 2002
Call#: Van Pelt Library HQ1410 .W644 2003
Call#: Van Pelt Library Reference Stacks HQ1410 .K444 1997
tagged ENGL96 american documentary_history primary_sources women history feminism
by jarson
...on 25-JAN-06
A searchable collection of primary documents and images on a wide range of topics pertaining to U.S. women's history.
tagged ENGL96 american history primary_sources subscription_database women
by jarson
...and 1 other person
...on 25-JAN-06
"Lowe's appealing work profiles the careers of nearly 300 women active in silent film, mostly as performers. Entries have biographical information, film credits, and, often, a still of the biographee. A few subject entries dot the text, some on unusual topics--e.g., "suffrage films." The work's unique scope--women from any aspect of the early history of the film industry--fills a vacancy in the literature at a time when interest in silent film is growing. For deeper coverage of about 50 early figures, readers may want to consult Ally Acker's Reel Women: Pioneers of the Cinema 1896 to the Present (1991). The appendixes of Lowe's work often provide arcane information difficult to find elsewhere: which silent film actress had the longest careers, which were WAMPA (Western Associated Motion Picture Advertisers) baby stars and sisters, which are memorialized on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and at Grauman's Chinese Theatre, and which covered in the main text functioned behind the scenes in the film industry. Strengths of this title include its breadth and extent of coverage, illustrations, readable style, and unique information." (Choice, June 2005)
"This site offers two approaches for the study of specific time periods in American women's history. Each section includes a timeline that links specific events with highly relevant online sources, followed by a guide to research sources (e.g., census, newspapers, secondary sources) that are appropriate for the specified time period."
tagged american history chronology research_guide women resources
by jarson
...and 1 other person
...on 16-NOV-05
Pfaelzer, J. (1999). Salt of the Earth: Women, Class, and the Utopian Imagination. Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, 16 (1): 120-31.
This is an article that deals with representations of working women and class in the film.
belongs to Salt of the earth project
tagged american blacklisting class film history hollywood mccarthyism politics salt_of_the_earth women
by jarson
...on 04-NOV-05


