Modern women on trial

Sexual transgression in the age of the flapper

9780719082641.jpg
Manchester University Press
Lucy Bland, series edited by Pamela Sharpe, Penny Summerfield, Lynn Abrams, Cordelia Beattie
Buy Book

Modern women on trial looks at several sensational trials involving drugs, murder, adultery, miscegenation and sexual perversion in the period 1918-24. The trials, all with young female defendants, were presented in the media as morality tales, warning of the dangers of sensation-seeking and sexual transgression. The book scrutinises the trials and their coverage in the press to identify concerns about modern femininity. The flapper later became closely associated with the 'roaring' 1920s, but in the period immediately after the Great War she represented not only newness and hedonism, but also a frightening, uncertain future. This figure of the modern woman was a personification of the upheavals of the time, representing anxieties about modernity, and instabilities of gender, class, race and national identity. This accessible, extensively researched book will be of interest to all those interested in social, cultural or gender history. -- .

9780719082641.jpg
Contributor Bio

Lucy Bland is Professor of Social and Cultural History at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge

More books by author

More in this series

9780719082641.jpg
9780719082641.jpg