Professional Pursuits women and the american arts and crafts movement Zipf, Catherine W.
Material type: TextPublication details: The University of Tennessee Press Knoxville 2007Description: X, 229ISBN:- 9781572336018
- ZIP
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | Library Annexe | 305.40973/ZIP/11129273 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 11129273 |
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304.8 / RAJ/ 13390 RURAL-URBAN MIGRATION:TRENDS CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES | 304 / BAN / 9686 MIGRATION AND REMITTANCES FACTBOOK 2008: | 305.3/WOO/29108 Gendered Lives | 305.40973/ZIP/11129273 Professional Pursuits | 305.42/SEN/28447 Gender And Development | 305 / DUS / 13548 IDENTITY POLITICS IN INDIA AND EUROP: | 306.87/WIL/NUS/27618 Intergenerational Communication Across The Life Span |
The Victorian era provided few opportunities for women in the professional world. The American Arts and Crafts movement, which began in the late nineteenth century to promote handcraftsmanship over mass production, was a major factor in changing the status of women as professional workers. In <i>Professional Pursuits</i>, Catherine Zipf examines the participation of women in this significant design movement and the role they played in revolutionizing the position of women in the professional world. She also shows how, in turn, the Arts and Crafts movement set the stage for social and political change in future years.
Zipf focuses on five gifted women in various parts of the country. In San Diego, Hazel Wood Waterman parlayed her Arts and Crafts training into a career in architecture. Cincinnati's Mary Louise McLaughlin expanded on her interest in Arts and Crafts pottery by inventing new ceramic technology.
New York's Candace Wheeler established four businesses that used Arts and Crafts production to help other women earn a living. In Syracuse, both Adelaide Alsop Robineau and Irene Sargent were responsible for disseminating Arts and Crafts-related information through the movement's publications. Each woman's story is different, but each played an important part in the creation of professional opportunities for women in a male-dominated society.
<i>Professional Pursuits</i> will be of interest to scholars and students of material culture and of the Arts and Crafts movement. More importantly, it chronicles a very significant, little-understood aspect of the development of Victorian capitalism: the integration of women into the professional workforce.
Catherine Zipf is an assistant professor in the Department of Cultural and Historic Preservation at Salve Regina University. She has published articles in <i>Women's Art News</i> and the <i>Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians</i>.
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