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@TITLE SINGLE = WOMAN AS CITIZEN: AN IDEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS<R>OF THREE WOMEN'S PUBLICATIONS, 1900-1910 SUBMITTED TO THE ASSOCIATION FOR EDUCATION IN JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION NATIONAL CONVENTION HISTORY DIVISION BY JANET M. CRAMER UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA APRIL, 1995 @SUBHEAD = @SUBHEAD = INTRODUCTION The turn of the 20th century, called the Progressive Era in American history, was a time of great change for the United States and for American women. A pervasive national ferment characterized by industrialization, urbanization and increased immigration was the backdrop for women's ongoing political fight for suffrage, for increased involvement in the workplace and in the professions, and for transformations within the home. Women were redefining their place in society and creating new identities<197>speci fically, a notion of their citizenship and a reconceptualization of their social role and contributions. This reconceptualization of citizenship and social involvement interfaced with the prevailing notions of what it meant to be 'woman' in early 20th-century society. Gender is a social construction, dependent on societal norms and values of a given time. The term <169>gender construction<170> is used throughout this paper to identify states, ideas, or assumptions regarding gender<197>ideas that are constructed from conditions and (pre)dispositions. The notion of 'citizenship' is also a social construction; women, as well as men, have refined and redefined the basis for citizenship depending on sociopolitical conditions and the norms and expectations of a given period of history. This is a case study of how three women's publications, published at the turn of the 20th century, constructed and/or propagated an ideology of <169>woman as citizen.<170> Ideology, as used here, is what Rosemary Hennessey refers to as <169>the array of sense-making practices which constitute what counts as 'the way things are' in any historical moment.<170><M^>1<D> How gender constructions intersected with issues of class, which is used here to refer to the states created by an unequal distribution of resources and wealth, is also explored. Woman's suffrage is here considered the arena in which the notion of women's citizenship and social identity was defined. The rhetoric of suffrage is naturally infused with the articulations of the rights and responsibilities of citizenship and a pronounced faith in the political process. From the mid-19th century to the early 20th century, discussions and attitudes concerning women and the extent of their public and political participation ultimately interfaced with the positions and perspectives related to woman's suffrage. In addition, the suffrage movement contained the conflicts, personalities and strategies that illuminated not only ideas about woman, but also ideas about class. @SUBHEAD = CULTURE, IDEOLOGY AND THE MEDIA The arguments for and against suffrage necessarily contained the <MI>discourse<D> related to citizenship. Using John Pauly's definition of a text as <169>any transcription that fixes human action for contemplation and interpretation,<170> the term <169>discourse,<170> in this study, refers to both the constellation of various texts and the notions contained within those texts.<M^>2 <D>ETexts (in this study the contents of the three women's publications) comprise the discursive terrain of words and images that presuppose a set of shared assumptions between the reader and the producer. Critical linguist Gunther Kress defines discourse as the set of possible statements about a given area, saying that discourses <169>define, describe and delimit what it is possible to say and not possible to say . . . with respect to the area of concern.<170><M^>3<D> The three publications were examined within the cultural fabric of the early 20th century, in an attempt to accomplish what journalism historian David Paul Nord calls <169>cultural history<170><197>the intersection of the history of human thought and the history of human action. Cultural historians ask, <169>What if reality itself is constructed in human consciousness and human discourse?<170> The cultural historian seeks to understand the <169>collective consciousness<170> of a given group of people and reads meanings from texts within the framework of the social and economic contexts in which texts were created.<M^>4<D> Stuart Hall has written that <169>the mass media are more and more responsible for providing the basis on which groups and classes construct an 'image' of the lives, meanings, practices and values [that] can be coherently grasped as a 'whole'.<170><M^>5<D> This construction of what Hall refers to as <169>social knowledge<170> or <169>social imagery<170> occurs within a mass-mediated cultural sphere. The women's publications studied here sought to convey to women this social knowledge in a way the mainstream media of their day did not. Although these publications could not be considered <MI>mass<D> media<197>their circulation was too small and specialized<197>they do provide a unique opportunity to analyze the ideology of the movements they represented and hence the notions of <169>woman<170> and <169>citizenship<170> they propagated or promoted. Although this study derives from the work of cultural studies, specifically critical cultural studies, the conceptual framework is what Hennessey refers to as <169>materialist feminism.<170><M^>6<D> Materialist feminism has evolved from critical Marxist theory, retaining the basic tenets of economic determinism and class conflict, while adding the consideration of patriarchal oppression and the devaluation of women, thereby making it more appropriate for feminist studies. Within materialist feminism, gender becomes a category of analysis, with special attention to the intersection of gender with class, race, and other economic and social realities. The materialist framework of this study seeks to explicate the reflections of ideological values, class relations and social power in a facet of culture<197>the media. Marxists contend that media are not merely carriers of ideology that manipulate and indoctrinate; they shape people's very idea of themselves and the world.<M^>7 <D> A key concept to this exploration is Antonio Gramsci's notion of hegemony<197>the process whereby a cultural 'common sense' is produced. Hegemony is manifest in the general notions people of any culture have about the way things should be; it is a dominant world-view, often culturally expressed and discursively articulated. Gramsci wrote about <169>how the ideological structure of a dominant class is actually organized,<170> concentrating on the press as its <169>most prominent and dynamic part.<170><M^>8<D> Performing a materialist feminist ideological critique of media, therefore, requires a <169>mode of reading that recognizes the various interests and discursive constructions of the social,<170><M^>9<D> with special emphasis on gender and class distinctions as portrayed and propagated through the media. As of this writing, there has been no critical cultural analysis of women's publications produced around the turn of the 20th century. Studies of the suffrage press have been descriptive treatments within a functional and/or social movement theoretical framework, leaving important questions about ideology and discourse unexplored.<M^>10<D> <MI>The Courant<D>, one of the publications chosen for this study, has been read for its constructions of the notion of woman; however, in her study, Georgia NeSmith does not explore how class realities may have contributed to or intersected with club women's notions of themselves.<M^>11<D> Ann Schofield has studied union journals and how they framed the <169>woman question,<170><M^>12<D> but it is not a study of women's publications<197>of the way women themselves formed and framed their role and communicated this identity to each other. It is a study of how 'others' have constructed women's image in the media, as is Angela McRobbie's critical cultural analysis of the con structions of femininity in a contemporary British publication.<M^>13<D> By and large, limited attention has been given women's publications in history, especially the ideological dimension of such publications, and the implications of the intersections of class and gender identity. @SUBHEAD = LOCATING SITES OF WOMEN'S DISCOURSE The <F52901P10MIC1>Woman's Tribune<W1> (1900-1909), <MI>The Courant<W1> (1900-1911), and <MI>The Socialist Woman<W1> (1907-1908; <F255P255DC255>renamed <MI>The Progressive Woman<D> in 1909) were chosen for study because they uniquely and particularly provide the opportunity for studying the discourse related to women's citizenship and class identity.<F52901P10W1C1> The <F52901P10MIC1>Woman's Tribune<W1> targeted suffragists and sought to be the unofficial voice and connection to the suffrage movement. Editor and publisher Clara Bewick Colby wrote that she wanted her publication to be the most valuable and important suffrage publication, yet she had no official ties to the national suffrage organizations. Though popular, with the highest circulation of any other suffrage paper, it was still considered the <169>number two<170> publication to the National American Woman Suffrage Association's official organ, the <F255P255MIC255>Woman's Journal<F52901P10W1C1>.<W1^>14<W1> For this reason, perhaps, Colby strived to make the paper acceptable for general circulation. She included non-suffrage news and considered men, as well as women, part of her audience.<W1^>15<W1> Colby's freelance status, her efforts toward wider circulation with a more varied content than her suffrage press competitors, and her consciousness regarding the importance of the press in women's lives all point to the <MI>Tribune<W1>'s importance for this study. The second publication, <MI>The Courant<D>, was published in St. Paul, Minnesota, by and for the Midwest chapter of the General Federation of Women's clubs. Most of its content was devoted to descriptions of women's club work, other business and educational pursuits. The Federation of Women's Clubs was established in 1890, bringing together 200 clubs representing 20,000 women with various reform agendae including labor laws, education, sanitation, and other social and political issues. By 1904, there were 45 state federations with a combined membership of 300,000, and 971 individual clubs.<M^>16<D> Women's clubs provided many women with their first foray into public life; therefore, the question of suffrage for the audiences of their publications seems particularly germane. Furthermore, women who belonged to these clubs were wealthy and considered <169>respectable.<170> The Federation had evolved from the study-club movement, and those educational, cultural roots continued to flavor the methods and priorities of the club movement. Supported by advertisers and subscribers, <MI>The Courant<D> was financially stable by 1904.<M^>17<D> Club women were shareholders in <MI>The Courant<D> Company, sat on its board of directors, and were frequent contributors as well as readers. It is, therefore, an appropriate publication for studying the constructions of woman's citizen identity, particularly among middle to upper class women in the Midwest. The third publication, <F52901P10MIC1>The Socialist Woman<W1>, presented the ideals and goals of the National Socialist Party by and for women of the party. Its political content, albeit controversial, nevertheless intersected with the crucial question of its time concerning politics and women: suffrage. <MI>The Socialist Woman<W1> was published as a monthly magazine beginning in June, 1907, in Chicago, Illinois. The editor was Josephine Conger-Kaneko, a graduate of Missouri's socialist Ruskin College, and a former columnist for the <F255P255MIC255>Appeal to Reason<D>, a socialist paper published by J.A. Wayland in Kansas City, Missouri.<M^>18<D> <F52901MI>The Socialist Woman<W1> was intended to educate women about socialism, leading them <169>to accept socialism as the one and only solution to the problems that crowd . . . upon their homes and their families. . . .<170><W1^>19 <W1>ESocialist women frequently allied themselves with the causes and concerns of working women. Revolt against their deplorable working conditions spawned women's union organization and involvement. This union activity and a working woman's experience of societal disapproval raised her consciousness to a level of discerning sophistication that her upper and middle class sisters might never have realized. Women in the labor movement began to understand the roots of oppression, specifically economic subjugation and the gendered aspect of that reality. Labor unions offered hope to the oppressed working woman, as did the socialist and suffrage movements; however, the socialist platform presented political and ideological alternatives to the woman's suffrage movement. Socialists were especially able to articulate the finer points of class distinction in explaining women's struggles in society, adding notions of capitalism and bourgeois oppression to the yet-undefined patriarchical suppression of women. With its emphasis on politics, women's advancement and freedom, and its intended working-class readership, <MI>The Socialist Woman<W1> provides an appropriate vehicle for examining the discourse related to woman's citizenship for women of the working class and of alternate political persuasion. @SUBHEAD = METHODOLOGY: DISCURSIVE CONSTRUCTIONS AS IDEOLOGY By examining the constructions of gender and class in these publications and observing a body of instances that create a field of meaning, this research was intended to uncover the ideological nature of these three publications. Discourse analysis is a method that studies not only the text, but also the unspoken underpinnings of that text<197>that is, it seeks to uncover the codes, constructions, cultural assumptions, connotations, and ideological underpinnings embedded in the text. Lawrence Grossberg describes this as a process of <169>identifying correspondences between the workings of a given text and the social structures of experience.<170><M^>20<D> The analysis focuses on the construction of social positions or identities and examines <169>how different practices, meanings, and identities are articulated together.<170><M^>21 <D> The researcher asks, <169>What are the interpretations of meaning and value created in the media and what is the relation to the rest of life.<170><M^>22<D> It also involves, as Pauly suggests, identifying the recurring patterns in discourse<197>the repetition of certain themes, phrases, rhetoric, and so on.<M^>23<D> The methods used here are informed by theories developed by structuralists and post-structuralists in linguistic scholarship,<M^>24<D> as well as by concepts derived from critical cultural studies. Stuart Hall claims that ideology may be located in what Louis Althusser defined as the <169>systems of representation<170> through and <169>within which people live the imaginary relation to their real conditions of existence.<170><M^>25<D> According to Hall, these ideological systems of representation may be uncovered through an analysis of discursive practices. Hall suggests an analysis of the text that seeks to uncover an unspoken pre-defined terrain, a <169>field of meanings,<170> which, because of its unconscious and pervasive quality, contains the real seeds of ideological hegemony.<170><M^>26<D> Michel Foucault, a post-Marxist poststructuralist, refers to <169>discursive formations<170> as <169>conceptual frameworks which allow some modes of thought and deny others.<170><M^>27<D> These discursive formations are the arenas for discourse; that is, they are a set of assumed<197>possibly unconscious<197>rules regarding what can be written, thought and acted upon in a particular field. In this study, it was supposed that <169>woman's citizenship<170> was a discursive formation, that there were predetermined rules and limits to the discourse that could occur around this gender identity. Incorporating Foucalt's ideas of <169>discursive formations<170> and Hall's notion of a <169>field of meanings,<170> each publication was read closely to discern constructions of woman as citizen. In order to locate gender-specific discourses related to citizenship, four categories were selected that relate to what historians have identified as the dominant ideologies for women during this period: woman as mother; woman as morally superior; woman as altruistic; and woman as fundamentally equal to man by natural or divine right.<M^>28<D> In addition, references to class difference were noted. That is, references to working-class women or bourgeois women, or arguments that based the need for suffrage on the conditions of class, were labeled and categorized. In addition, any constructions or definitions of women in the public sphere (other than those used as arguments for suffrage) were recorded. The following are examples of each type of argument. Woman as mother: @QUOTE = <169>If any one . . . is entitled to vote, is it not the devoted mother who brings the boy into life and guards and nurtures him and shapes his character and directs his thought?<M^>29<D> Woman as Morally Superior: @QUOTE = <169>[T]here can be no doubt that the participation of women in our public affairs has had a most elevating influence.<170><M^>30<D> Woman as Altruistic: @QUOTE = <169>In what women . . . can inspire men to do through direct stimulus and by transmitting to them stronger intellects, more awakened souls, and a truer patriotism, lies the hope of humanity.<170><M^>31<D> Woman as Fundamentally Equal to Man: @QUOTE = <169>It is your duty to demand an equal right to work for God and humanity as your husband and brother works. . . .<170><M^>32<D><R> Approximately thirty issues from each publication over the ten-year time period of 1900-1910 were studied. For each publication, only articles related to suffrage or that distinctly identified their purpose as defining woman's role were read.<M^>33<D> The purpose of selecting a ten-year span was to identify whether shifts in argument and rationale may have occurred within a publication, and to ascertain the range of discourse related to woman's identity as citizen. Content was compared across publications and within publications over time to answer these research questions for each publication: 1. What was the range and tenor of the discourse regarding woman as citizen with respect to the gender constructions defined above as mother, altruistic, morally superior, and equal to men? 2. Were there different constructions of the notion of woman as citizen <MI>other than<D> the four predominant ideologies of mother, altruistic, morally superior, or as equal to men? 3. Were issues of class difference acknowledged or articulated? If so, what were the distinctions, constructions and representations of upper, middle and lower class women? 4. Were the representations of women the same in all three publications? As presupposed definitions created by the culture and conditions in the first decade of the 20th century, it was expected that the four gender constructions would be present in all publications. Further, differences in how gender was defined were expected to correspond to, and differ by, class status. This expectation is based on Hall's observation that language usage reflects class structures within a capitalist society<197>that <169>it will be dependent on the nature of the social relations in which it is embedded, the manner in which its users are socially organized together, [and] the social and material contexts in which it is employed.<170><M^>34<D> Employing discourse analysis and a reading of ideology within the framework of poststructuralist materialist feminism accomplishes the main purpose of this study: examining the role of women's media in articulating and defining women's identity to ascertain the discursive constructions of the ideology of <169>woman as citizen<170> and whether these constructions transcended class boundaries. @SUBHEAD = DISCURSIVE CONSTRUCTIONS OF WOMAN AS CITIZEN In general, in response to the four research questions stated above, it was found that, in response to question four, even though the primary discursive arena remained the same, the representations of these constructions of women differed in the <MI>Woman's <F52901>Tribune<F255D>, <MI>The Courant<D>, and <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>. That is, the discourse found in the three women's publications conformed to the predominant ideologies that historians have identified for the period<197>woman as mother; woman as morally superior; woman as altruistic; and woman as equal to man<197>but each publication presented these constructions in a distinct fashion. Regarding question two, an alternative construction of woman as citizen was found in only one publication<197><MI>The Socialist Woman<D>. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> presented a distinctly different image and set of priorities regarding women's citizenship from that of the other two publications, and although some differences were expected, this publication revealed a greater departure from prevailing discourses than expected. In response to question three, it was found that, because of these differences between publications, and the nature of the discourse itself, the gender constructions appear to be related to class. This analysis, therefore, not only identifies the discursive constructions of woman, but also links these constructions to the social and economic arrangements they support. @BODY BOLD = CONSTRUCTIONS OF WOMAN AS CITIZEN @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>Woman's Tribune<W1I> The content of the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> regarding the suffrage question conformed to the four categories, with varying degrees of weight. The prevailing argument was based on woman's natural right to vote<197>her essential equality with men. In spite of an occasional vehement argument for suffrage, the tone of the <MI>Tribune<D>'s content was restrained and the articulate, 'newsy' articles addressed the reader as mature, educated, broad-minded<197>concerned not only about achieving suffrage, but also abou t the range of new concerns spawned by the evolving industrialist, urban age. Overall, the four categories constituted the majority of discourse concerning woman's right to vote, and no one construction was overwhelmingly predominant.<F52901P11W1C1> @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Courant<W1I> The image and expectations of woman <MI>as a voting citizen<D> are not clear in the pages of <F52901MI>The Courant<W1>, which was primarily, and admittedly, ambivalent on the issue of suffrage and reflected the overall uncertainty of the Federation of Women's Clubs on the question. Very few (less than five) references to suffrage were found from 1899-1903. There were, however, references to woman's ideal role, as perceived by club women. When they did appear, the suffrage positions in <MI>The Courant<W1> centered on the value of mothers as voters and woman's fundamental equality with man. The two constructions of woman's citizenship <F255MI>as voter<D> least frequent in <F52901MI>The Courant<W1> were altruism and moral superiority. This, however, stands in sharp contradiction to the images club women were creating for themselves. That is, club women most frequently justified their involvement in club work<197>and characterized that work<197>as altruistic and morally rich service to humanity. The editors did not consistently link that service, however, with advocacy for the opportunity to vote. <MI>The Courant<W1> woman's civic identity was tied to her love of home and children. <169>True life is altruistic,<170> a 1903 article reads. <169>It believes in self-culture and self-blessing, but only that it may . . . better equip us as wives and mothers and members of society.<170><W1^>35<W1> By 1909, club women were willing to articulate the ways they felt equal to men and specially enabled as mothers for the good of society, but they could not find a way to translate these beliefs into suffrage advocacy, a position Lavinia Dock criticized as <169>cowardly,<170> as she confronted club women's fear of <169>false public opinion.<170><M^>36<D> Indeed, a concern about propriety is evident in the content of <MI>The Courant<D>. There were occasional references to a fear of appearing <169>manly,<170> receiving public censure, and even private rebuke from one's husband. Any favorable references to suffrage were made usually because the cause was sanctioned by some well-respected authority, such as First Lady Helen Taft, Florence Nightingale, or Governor John A. Johnson of Minnesota.<M^>37<F52901P11W1C1> By 1909, modest pro-suffrage <169>arguments<170> began to appear in <MI>The Courant<D>, such as an article entitled <169>Woman as Citizen<170> that articulated the club women's actions and priorities as <169>citizen<170> behavior and tied those endeavors to the right to vote: <169>The trouble is that while we have achieved the form and semblance of the citizen, we have not realized citizenship . . . which is the working combination of constitutional powers with the obligation to exercise such power. . . .<1 70><M^>38 <D> @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Socialist Woman<W1I> No gentility or reserve was observed in <F52901P10MIC1>The Socialist Woman<W1> editor's position on suffrage. This was because Josephine Conger-Kaneko promoted socialism and suffrage simultaneously and for the same reason: emancipation of women. The suffrage question received more coverage in <F255P255MIC255>The Socialist Woman<D>, both in number of issues and length of articles, than in either <MI>The Courant<D> or the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D>. The first issue of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> was published in June, 1907; the first suffrage article appeared in November of that year, and then, with the exception of five months, every month thereafter until December, 1909. Moreover, two <169>suffrage numbers<170> were published. Certainly, the overtly political tone and <MI>raison d'etre<D> of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> linked it with the suffrage issue. The terrain on which socialists fought was political; if women were to have any strength in society, in political reforms, and in achieving equality, they must also have the franchise.<F52901P11W1C1> The four constructions of woman as citizen were more difficult to discern in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>. Even though references were made to woman's role as mother and woman's essential equality with men, the rhetoric differed considerably from that found in the other two publications. For instance, the other two publications invoked attractive and favorable connections between motherhood and citizenship or suffrage advocacy. Conger-Kaneko, however, was sarcastic in her praise when she wrote, <169>Sacred motherhood! Divine motherhood! Be-au-ti-ful motherhood! I know a voter so chivalrous . . . he would not for a moment entertain the idea of the mother of his brood of six voting. . . . Sacred motherhood! No!<170><M^>39<D> The socialist woman's equality with man was presented as a desired state concurrent with economic reforms: <170>When the full realization of all this freedom comes, then, and then only, will she stand as the equal of man<197>who shall also have achieved economic freedom from his kind.<170><M^>40<F52901P11W1C1> The constructions of woman as altruistic and morally superior were also articulated differently. The reader of <F52901MI>The Socialist Woman<W1> (and <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>) was frequently instructed to put her own emancipation above other concerns and to fight for the ballot on the basis of her socially and politically impoverished condition. The vote was not presented as a tool for altruistic service<197>the vote meant freedom and power, especially the opportunity to effect revolutionary change that would enhance women's conditions.<M^>41<D> The morally superior construction, as a rationale for the right to vote, was not found in the newspaper issues examined. Although women criticized men as a voting group, they did not see themselves as being able to effect, on a moral plane, any higher standards. For example, in an article by Conger-Kaneko entitled <169>Woman's Intelligent Vote Will Abolish the Liquor Traffic,<170> the argument is not that women will impose higher moral standards through the ballot; rather, it is a diatribe against the inequality of a system that denies a woman the opportunity to express an opinion through the vote on a matter that affects her intimately, particularly if she is married to a <169>drunken husband.<170><M^>42<D> Conger-Kaneko's primary argument is equality and economic revolution, not the necessity of women's moral imposition.<M^>43<D> Woman as mother and woman as equal to man did appear in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, but as mentioned earlier, the articulations of these positions are distinct from those in <MI>The Courant<W1> or the <MI>Woman's <F52901>Tribune<F255W1>. Equality with men was not strongly asserted; in fact, a particularly strong article in the April, 1908, issue called men <169>indolent<170> and <169>politically stupid.<170><M^>44<D> The construction of women as equal to men would thus seem distinctly unattractive. Most significant, however, is the criticism of the inequality of capitalist society. Under the capitalist system, men themselves could not be equal to each other, so how could women ever be equal with men? Elizabeth Cady Stanton, herself, asserted, <169>It is impossible to have 'equal rights for all' under our<F52901P11W1C1> <F255P255DC255>present competitive system.<170><M^>45<D> Lena Morrow Lewis explored this perspective in the February, 1908, issue, calling the ballot a <169>social necessity<170> rather than a natural right.<M^>46 <D> With respect to the woman as mother construction, some articles evoked images of hearth and home but portrayed the home as slave quarters, with the husband the tyrannical master. Still, arguments in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> occasionally invoked the prevailing notion of woman as mother. Arguments were frequently tailored toward mothers or women who worked at home, not as actual readers, but as <169>states.<170> In other words, articles in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> referred to the state of motherhood or homemaker as a construction of gender to which all readers could relate, even if they were wage earners. In one article, the two were combined into one <169>working class<170>: <169>There are two great bodies of women in the working class, the mothers engaged in keeping the home and the women actually employed in the factories and shops.<170><M^>47 <D>EThe suffrage could be seen as a benefit to both; it would benefit mothers by enabling them to enact reforms that would improve conditions for their children, and it would benefit wage-earning women by improving conditions in the workplace. @BODY BOLD = ALTERNATIVE CONSTRUCTIONS OF WOMAN AS CITIZEN No other representations were found of women<197>particularly of the ideal voting woman<197>in the pages of the <MI>Woman's <F52901>Tribune<F255D> or <F52901MI>The Courant<W1>. Only<F255MI> <F52901>The Socialist Woman<F255D> offered another construction of woman as citizen, namely, woman as independent revolutionary. There was a much more defiant and contentious tone to the articles in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>. Statements were heavily weighted in favor of suffrage as a means of reform and a way to alleviate the burdens of the working class. In addition, lines were often drawn tightly between working women and upper class women, and between men and women, even socialist men. The reader of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> was often presented with pugnacious statements regarding men, the Socialist Party, and upper class women. Other articles attacked the <169>bourgeois<170> suffrage movement and the Federation of Women's Clubs. Contributors to the magazine frequently portrayed working class women in a unique double oppression: They were disfranchised as women and mistreated as workers. Furthermore, these women could not rely on any other protector. The writers felt abandoned by their party and found themselves on an ideological plane different from that of other suffragists.<M^>48 Although men were criticized in <MI>The Courant<D> and the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D>, middle and upper class women criticized men voters for not having the high moral standards women voters would have. Socialist women criticized the entire capitalist system in which men participated. They did not wish to <169>elevate<170> men or the body of voters; they wanted full-scale reform. This perspective seems entirely linked to the class status of the readers of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> as compared to the other two publications. In addition, socialist women sought their power in relative isolation. While club women may have seen the powerful political echelon as potential allies, and readers of the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> may have rested comfortably in the notion of shared equality with men and working side-by-side as partners, socialist women found themselves in an agitated, separate realm.<F52901W1> Some historians of the period claim that socialist women first advocated for socialism and then believed this would bring about the ballot<197>that the ballot meant nothing without the large scale political reform socialist women desired. These arguments were presented in <MI>The Socialist Woman<W1>, but in equal measure with strong admonitions to work for the ballot <MI>and<D> the revolution and not wait for one to bring about the other. Articles repeatedly encouraged socialist women to enter and transform suffrage organizations, or to educate women not only to the need for the vote but also to the importance of using that vote to bring about a socialist government.<M^>49<D> While most suffrage advocates saw the suffrage as a goal in itself, socialist women saw its advantage as a tool to achieve their reforms. Educating women to vote also meant educating them to vote for socialism. While this was not a gender construction, per se, it did present an image of the woman citizen as revolutionary. What <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> seemed to convey was that the woman who earned the right to vote<197>who was an enfranchised citizen of the United States<197>would also be a socialist. Frequently, articles in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> referred to the <169>potential suffragist converts,<170> or to winning women over to gain the ballot and, in the process, teaching them what to vote for. In a plea to the participants of the Socialist National Convention, a writer made this threat: <169>If you do not champion the woman's cause . . . then the women will flock to those who are willing to help them. . . . By making the woman's cause your own you not only prove your loyalty to the exploited and oppressed, you also win over to Socialism thousands of women. . . .<170><M^>50<F52901P11W1C1> In addition to promoting full-scale sociopolitical reform, the other strategy apparent in the content of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> was conversion of the mainstream suffrage movement. Socialist women and working women believed the suffrage movement to be bourgeois and essentially unresponsive to their needs. Twice, in 1908, <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> articles and editorials encouraged working women to join existing suffrage organizations primarily for the purposes of gaining influence. For example, one editorial said, <169>The first thing is to get women into the locals, and to spread the socialist teaching among them by any method that gets results. . . . [T]hese socialist women would join existing suffrage bodies, and in such numbers as to control them, if possible.<170><M^>51<F52901P11W1C1> In a 1907 article, author Josephine R. Cole proposed that socialist women enter the suffrage movement, not only for the ultimate goal of suffrage, but also to convert the women in the movement to socialist ideals, making it <169>no longer a bourgeois movement, but a working-class movement.<170> @BODY BOLD = CONSTRUCTIONS AND MATERIALITY<197>CLASS CONSIDERATIONS @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>Woman's Tribune<W1I> References to women as property owners and taxpayers as a rationale for suffrage were found in the <MI>Woman's <F52901>Tribune<F255D>, although this was not directly identified as a class concern. Some of these passages did not suggest that taxpaying or property ownership assured a higher class woman voter; rather, they simply indicated that the taxpaying argument was effective.<M^>53<D> Articles in the <MI>Tribune<D> acknowledged women's increasing participation in the work force, but these observations carried no sense of separateness between working women and the monied classes. In fact, Colby united all women under the definition of working women when, in March, 3, 1906, she wrote, <169>Women . . . whether they work in their homes or abroad, are equally building up the material and intellectual advancement of their commonwealth and are entitled to the aid of [the] ever broad-minded and progressive person.<170><M^>54<D> Class interests were not offered often as a rationale for suffrage, although, occasionally, the vote was argued for in terms of how it would help the working woman. Colby did report that the 1906 <MI>Labor Record<D> indicated that the prime cause of women's disabilities as a wage earner was disfranchisement.<M^>55 <D> Only one reference to the socialist movement was found in the issues read, and that was a reader's criticism of socialist newspapers that failed to advocate woman's suffrage.<M^>56<D> @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Courant<W1I> Club women, as portrayed through <MI>The Courant<D>, seem to have been caught in a dilemma over suffrage and working women. While they saw suffrage as a potential force for good in terms of women who endured unjust labor laws, they did not want to endorse the right to vote for fear of impropriety or a loss of social and political standing. Their validity and authority as club women depended on their image of righteousness, moral certainty, and care for the less fortunate. To seem allied with the politically charged suffrage issue and its often countercultural allies threatened their carefully crafted persona. During these years, the club women did not see what they could do with the vote, but they understood how it could help <169>other women.<170> Frequent articles in <MI>The Courant<D> acknowledged the importance of the vote for working women, but the tone of these appeals was matronizing, implying that <MI>Courant<D> readers could justify the vote if it were seen as some sort of service to lower class women. Upstanding, socially correct women would not want the vote for themselves, but it was acceptable to want it for their <169>less fortunate<170> sisters.<M^>57<F52901P11DC1> Some statements in <MI>The Courant <D>referred to women's apparent indifference to the vote.<M^>58<D> This reported indifference illustrates that club women may have felt they could do good for society through club involvement and therefore would not need the vote. Their sense of agency, either through their club work or through their affiliation with the politically powerful, superceded an urgency for suffrage. This, then, explained the club woman's indifference as reported in <MI>The Courant<D>. It also highlights a distinct difference between classes of women and how they perceived the vote. Involvement in social problems was essential, but it appears club women felt that could be accomplished without suffrage and without alienating the <169>respectable<170> authorities who did not support a woman's right to vote. The indifference also reveals the absence of any sense of urgency around obtaining the vote for reasons of self-protection. Working women, as portrayed in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, thought they needed the vote for their own protection; <MI>The Courant <D>readers didn't seem to require the vote, either for protection or agency. As long as club women saw themselves as essentially privileged, and able to do good for the less fortunate, they failed to see how the ballot empowered them personally.<F52901P11C1> Hence, <MI>The Courant <D>failed to take a strong stance supporting or rejecting suffrage. The publication finally endorsed the effort only after the editors observed that other respected members of society and public opinion in general had moved to support such a measure. At that time the editors relied on arguments with which no dedicated club woman could have disagreed<197>the use of the vote for popular reform measures for children, sanitation and education.<M^>59 @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Socialist Woman<W1I> The prevailing argument for suffrage in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> was defiance of the <169>capitalist patriarchy.<170> Universal suffrage was the rallying call for socialist and working women. The vote was so crucial as a means of protection that any suffrage right extended to women must include working women. A franchise extended only to upper class women would achieve none of the full-scale reform socialists sought; therefore, the suffrage arguments attacked the bourgeois references to property rights, a nd indeed bourgeois women themselves, and advocated for the working class, the women most oppressed in a capitalist system. In other words, the economic status of these women informed and guided their suffrage rhetoric. They sought not only the vote, but also the vote extended to all women, and for the purposes of reform, specifically socialist reform. Repeatedly, these assertions were intertwined in the arguments promoting suffrage, helping to establish the image of woman as needing to fight for her own su rvival and freedom.<M^>60<D> The absence of the construction of woman as morally superior as a rationale for suffrage in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, considering its inclusion in the other two publications, may suggest that economically privileged women felt a greater sense of moral superiority than did working women. Middle and upper class women believed that education, temperance, and sexual purity were their values. That <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> did not include rhetoric concerning woman's moral superiority as<F52901P11W1C1> a <F255 P255DC255>basis for the franchise, while the other two publications did, suggests a moral/ideological rift between classes of women. @BODY BOLD = DIFFERENCES IN GENDER CONSTRUCTIONS AMONG PUBLICATIONS @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>Woman's Tribune<W1I> Through the breadth of its articles, the moderate rhetoric, and the recurring claim for equality of the sexes, the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> presented a less idealistic image, and a more pragmatic and natural construction of woman than the other two publications studied. The construction of gender was perhaps looser in the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> because that construction was based on the belief in prevailing equality and natural right.<F52901P11W1C1> Although articles in the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> utilize all four of the predominant constructions of woman's citizenship, the presentation was less one-sided and more eclectic than the other two publications studied. The primary image of woman in the <MI>Woman's Tribune<D> was someone endowed with natural rights and liberties, educated, and concerned with how morals and values might be upheld<197>both in the polls and at home. The <MI>Tribune<D> content also appealed to women readers' unique status as mothers and how as mothers they might contribute to the betterment of society.<F52901P11C1> @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Courant<W1I> The overall image created of the woman as citizen in the pages of <MI>The Courant<D> is conflicted. Deeply concerned with social service and improving social conditions, the club woman needed a certain level of respectability and status to serve effectively. This respectability was threatened by the general agitation over suffrage and how it forced a reconceptualization of woman's role. Club women saw themselves as altruistic and morally superior, but to endorse suffrage required an uncomfortable alliance with wage-earning women and an oppositional stance to the monied, powerful class. They needed a way to combine acceptable notions of womanhood with the justice and power of enfranchisement. Service to their less fortunate sisters, and articulations as to how the vote would help homemakers achieve their goals, became the successful rhetorical compromise. <F52901P11W1C1> When the suffrage movement gained more popular support, and the support of elected officials, the Federation women moved smoothly into a suffrage advocacy role they had found so ill-fitting in previous years. They could not stand with their lower class sisters or with the <169>paupers and the idiots.<170><M^>61<D> They resolved this and enlarged their commitment to serving others by equating suffrage with an efficient means of serving working women and further enabling women who <169>worked<170> in the home. @BODY ITALIC = <F52901P10MIC1>The Socialist Woman<W1I> Evident in the pages of <MI>The Socialist Woman<D> and <MI>The Progressive Woman<D> (as the former was later named) was a different notion of woman as citizen and what she was to accomplish with her enfranchised status. The categories of woman as mother and woman as equal to men appear, but not necessarily as ideals. Furthermore, the class sensitivity is so acute as to create a new construction of woman based on her working status, creating a motivation for her enfranchisement and for ultimate revolution. Finally, this independent revolutionary<197>not beholden to any organization or individual<197>is the image of the woman citizen that seemed most promoted in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>. Hence, a new discursive realm appeared in <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, but it was a realm determined by the material conditions of women's existence. Although the ideology differed, the roots of woman's gender construction remained economic.<F52901P11W1C1> @SUBHEAD = CONCLUSION This study provides only a small piece of the puzzle related to the overall picture of gender constructions in history. The focus here was on woman's citizen identity, and the various notions concerning woman's social and political involvements. The three publications chosen for study were intended to represent a cross-section of readers from various socioeconomic classes and all were chosen because they were published for and by women with a stated political or social service inclination. By studying and observing instances<197>textual passages<197>which created a field of meanings, an overall discursive construction was defined. This discursive construction correlated to four ideologies of woman's identity characterized by historians: woman as mother, woman as altruistic, woman as morally superior, and woman as equal to man. The research on the three women's publications revealed, however, distinct differences in articulations of <169>woman as citizen.<170> Although some constructions prevailed, namely woman as mother and woman as equal to man, the ways these were articulated and the supporting rhetoric varied by publication and, hence, presumably, by class. What seems, then, to determine media's role in preserving cultural hegemony is the adherence to a set of discursive constructions, previously defined as a set of rules, conditions and constraints that make possible what can be said regarding a given subject. In his article, <169>The Rediscovery of 'Ideology': Return of the Repressed in Media Studies,<170> Stuart Hall refers to this as <169>consensus formation.<170> Further, Hall suggests that consensus is not just around rules of discourse; rather, it encom passes the whole societal structure itself<197>"conformity to the rules of a very definite set of social, economic and political structures."<M^>62<D> If these structures are oppressive or unjust<197>racist, sexist, classist<197>then ideological struggle becomes integral to resistance against these structures. Thus, we are well served by understanding the connection between ideology and media. Hennessey observes that such historical study also provides a better understanding of how discourses from a particular moment in history may continue to exercise ideological pressures on the present.<M^>63<D> By locating the discursive constructions of woman as citizen this study traces an ideological heritage and the historical<197>and perhaps present day<197>relationship of discourse and gender ideology may be better understood. @SUBHEAD = ENDNOTES @BODY SINGLE = 1. Rosemary Hennessey, <MI>Materialist Feminism and the Politics of Discourse<D> (New York and London: Routledge, 1993), p. 14. @BODY SINGLE = 2. John Pauly, <169>A Beginner's Guide to Doing Qualitative Research in Mass Communication,<170> <MI>Journalism Monographs<D> 125 (February, 1991), p. 14. @BODY SINGLE = 3. Gunther R. Kress, <MI>Linguistic Processes in Sociocultural Practice<D> (Victoria: Deakin University Press, 1985), pp. 6-7. @BODY SINGLE = 4. David Paul Nord, <169>Intellectual History, Social History, Cultural History . . . and Our History,<170> <MI>Journalism Quarterly<D> 67:4 (Winter 1990), pp. 645-648. @BODY SINGLE = 5. Stuart Hall, <169>Culture, the Media and the 'Ideological Effect',<170> in <MI>Mass Communication and Society<D>, James Curran, Michael Gurevitch, Janet Woollacott, eds. (Sage Publications, 1979), p. 340. @BODY SINGLE = 6. Hennessey, <MI>op cit<D>., p. xi. @BODY SINGLE = 7. This observation of Marxist thought is derived from the Marxist notions of <169>false consciousness<170> and the importance of ideology in maintaining dominant ruling ideas<197>see especially Hall, <169>Culture, the Media and the 'Ideological Effect',<170> <MI>op cit<D>., pp. 315-348; also Armand Mattelart, <MI>Mass Media, Ideologies and the Revolutionary Movement<D>, Malcolm Coad, trans. (Sussex: Harvester Press, 1980), pp. 11-16; and Louis Althusser, <169>Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses: Notes Toward an Investigation,<170> in <MI>Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays<D>, B. Brewster, trans. (London: Penguin Press, 1971), pp. 142-184. @BODY SINGLE = 8. David Forgacs and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, eds., <MI>Antonio Gramsci: Selections from Cultural Writings<D> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985), p. 386. For further exploration of Gramsci's theory of hegemony, see also Chantal Mouffe, <MI>Gramsci and Marxist Theory<D> (London: Routledge, 1979). @BODY SINGLE = 9. Hennessey, <MI>op cit.<D>, p. 15 @BODY SINGLE = 10. Literature primarily about the suffrage press includes: Martha Solomon, ed., <MI>A Voice of Their Own<D> (Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1991), which cites several local and national studies; Lana F. Rakow and Cheris Kramarae, eds., <MI>The Revolution in Words, Righting Women 1868-1871<D> (New York: Routledge, 1990); Marion Marzolf, <MI>Up from the Footnote: A History of Women Journalists<D> (New York: Hastings House, 1977); and articles by Lynne Masel-Walters, Anne Mather and Linda Steiner, as noted in bibliography. @BODY SINGLE = 11. Georgia NeSmith, <169>Gender and Progressivism: Voices from <MI>The Courant<D>, 1899-1904,<170> unpublished paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, History Division, 1987. @BODY SINGLE = 12. Ann Schofield, <169>Rebel Girls and Union Maids: The Woman Question in the Journals of the AFL and IWW, 1905-1920,<170> <MI>Feminist Studies<D> 9 (1983), pp. 335-358. @BODY SINGLE = 13. Angela McRobbie, <169><MI>Jackie<D>: An Ideology of Adolescent Femininity,<170> in <MI>Popular Culture: Past and Present<D>, Bernard Waites, Tony Bennett and Graham Martin, eds. (London: Open University, 1982). @BODY SINGLE = 14. E. Claire Jerry, <169>The Role of Newspapers in the Nineteenth-Century Woman's Movement,<170> in <MI>A Voice of Their Own<D>, <MI>op cit.<D>, pp. 126-128. @BODY SINGLE = 15. <MI>Ibid<D>., p. 128. @BODY SINGLE = 16. Mary I. Wood, <MI>The History of the General Federation of Women's Clubs for the first 22 years of its organization<D> (New York: General Federation of Women's Clubs, History Department, 1912), p. 166. Other histories of the General Federation of Women's Clubs include: Karen J. Blair, <MI>The Clubwoman as Feminist: True Womanhood Redefined, 1868-1914<D> (New York: Holmes and Meier Publishers, 1980); and Mildred White Wells, <MI>Unity in Diversity; the History of the General Federation of Women's Clubs<D> (Washington: General Federation of Women's Clubs, 1953). @BODY SINGLE = 17. NeSmith, <MI>op cit<D>., p. 4. @BODY SINGLE = 18. Mari Jo Buhle, <MI>Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920<D> (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1981), pp. 113-117. For an analysis of this publication, see John Graham, ed., <MI><169>Yours for the Revolution<170>: the<D> Appeal to Reason, <MI>1895-1922<D>. (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1990). @BODY SINGLE = 19. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, vol. 1, no. 1, 1907. @BODY SINGLE = 20. Lawrence Grossberg, <169>Strategies of Marxist Cultural Interpretation,<170> in <MI>Critical Perspectives on Media and Society<D>, Robert K. Avery and David Eason, eds. (New York: The Guilford Press, 1991), p. 151. @BODY SINGLE = 21. <MI>Ibid<D>., p. 148. @BODY SINGLE = 22. Clifford Christians and James Carey, <169>The Logic and Aims of Qualitative Research,<170> in <MI>Research Methods in Mass Communication<D>, 2nd edition, guido Stempel and Bruce Westley, eds. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1989), p. 359. @BODY SINGLE = 23. Pauly, <MI>op cit<D>., p. 19. @BODY SINGLE = 24. Structuralism and post-structuralism as research approaches are described and discussed in Stuart Hall, <169>Cultural Studies: two paradigms,<170> in <MI>Media, Culture and Society, a Critical Reader<D>, Collins, Curran, Garnham, Scannell, Schlesinger and Sparks, eds. (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1986), and Richard Johnson, <169>Histories of Culture/Theories of Ideology,<170> in <MI>Ideology and Cultural Production<D>, Barrett, Corrigan, Kuhn and Wolff, eds. (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1979). Additional works on critical linguistics that provided insight and direction for this study are: Teun van Dijk, <169>Discouse and Cognition in Society,<170> in <MI>Communication Theory Today<D>, David Crowley and David Mitchell, eds. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1994); Teun van Dijk, <169>The Interdisciplinary Study of News as Discourse,<170> in <MI>A Handbook of Qualitative Methodologies for Mass Communication Research<D>, Klaus Bruhn Jensen and Nicholas W. Jankowski, eds. (London and New York: Routledge, 1991); Teun van Dijk, <MI>News Analysis<D> (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., 1988); Roger Fowler, <MI>Language in the News: Discourse and Ideology in the Press<D> (London and New York: Routledge, 1991); Roger Fowler, Bob Hodge, Gunther Kress and Tony Trew, <MI>Language and Control<D> (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979); Gunther Kress and Robert Hodge, <MI>Language as Ideology<D> (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979); Gunther Kress, <169>Ideological Structures in Discourse,<170> in <MI>Handbook of Discourse Analysis<D>, vol. 4, Teun van Dijk, ed. (London: Academic Press, 1985). @BODY SINGLE = 25. Stuart Hall, <169>Signification, Representation, Ideology: Althusser and the Post-Structuralist Debates,<170> in <MI>Critical Perspectives on Media and Society<D>, <MI>op cit<D>., p. 109. @BODY SINGLE = 26. <MI>Ibid<D>., p. 105. @BODY SINGLE = 27. John Storey, <MI>An Introductory Guide to Cultural Theory and Popular Culture<D> (Athens, GA: The University of Georgia Press, 1993), pp. 91-92. @BODY SINGLE = 28. Aileen S. Kraditor, in <MI>The Ideas of the Woman's Suffrage Movement<D> (New York and London: Columbia University Press, 1965), identified two types of argument used by suffragists: the <169>justice<170> argument based on an assumption of the natual equality of human beings, and the <169>expediency<170> argument, based on the notion that woman suffrage would benefit society and offer women self-protection as well as societal reforms. The ideology of Educated Motherhood for both upper class and working women, as well as the <169>morality<170> argument, is explored in Sheila Rothman's book, <MI>Woman's Proper Place: A History of Changing Ideals and Practices, 1870 to the present<D> (New York: Basic Books, 1978). Other works that focus on the ideology of women around the turn of the 20th century include: Steven M. Buechler, <MI>Women's Movements in the United States<D> (London: Rutgers University Press, 1990); Nancy F. Cott, <MI>The Grounding of Modern Feminism<D> (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1987); Sara M. Evans, <MI>Born for Liberty: A History of Women in America<D> (New York: The Free Press, 1989); Eleanor Flexner, <MI>Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States<D> (Boston, MA: Harvard University Press, 1975); Jean E. Friedman and William G. Shade, <MI>Our American Sisters: Women in American Life and Thought<D> (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, Inc., 1973); Linda Kerber, <MI>Women of the Republic<D> (New York and London: Norton, 1980); Aileen S. Kraditor, ed., <MI>Up From the Pedestal: Selected Writings in the History of American Feminism<D> (Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1968); Gerda Lerner, <MI>The Majority Finds Its Past: Placing Women in History<D> (New York: Oxford University Press, 1979); Paula Baker, <169>The Domestication of Politics: Women and American Political Society, 1780-1920,<170> <MI>American Historical Review<D> 89 (June, 1984); Barbara Welter, <169>The Cult of True Womanhood,<170> <MI>American Quarterly<D> 18 (1966). Works that examined the idelogy of the working class and the working woman's relationship to the suffrage movement include: Mari Jo Buhle, <MI>Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920<D> (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1981); Ellen Carol DuBois, <169>Working women, class relations, and suffrage militance: Harriot Stanton Blatch and the New York woman suffrage movement, 1894-1909,<170> in <MI>Unequal Sisters, A Multicultural Reader in United States Women's History<D>, Ellen Carol DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, eds. (New York: Routledge, 1990); Nancy Schrom Dye, <169>Creating a Feminist Alliance: Sisterhood and Class Conflict in the New York WTUL, 1903-1914,<170> <MI>Feminist Studies<D>, 2 (1973); Sarah Eisenstein, <MI>Give Us Bread But Give Us Roses, working women's consciousness in the United States, 1890 to the First World War<D> (London, Boston, Melbourne and Henley: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983); Phillip S. Foner, <MI>Women and the American Labor Movement: from the first trade unions to the present<D> (New York: Free Press, 1982); Robin Jacoby, <169>The Women's Trade Union League and American Feminism,<170> <MI>Feminist Studies<D> 2 (1975); Carol Lasser, <169>Gender, Ideology and Class in the Early Republic,<170> <MI>Journal of the Early Republic<D>, 10 (Fall 1990); Meredith Tax, <MI>The Rising of the Women: Feminist Solidarity and Class Conflict, 1880-1917<D> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1980).<MI> @BODY SINGLE = 29. <MI>Woman's Tribune<D>, January 6, 1906. @BODY SINGLE = 30. <MI>Ibid<D>., July 14, 1900. @BODY SINGLE = 31. <MI>Ibid<D>., January 12, 1901. @BODY SINGLE = 32. <MI>Ibid<D>., November 10, 1906. @BODY SINGLE = 33. This was not uncommon; the <169>woman question<170> was in widespread debate and conversation during this period, so publications often identified articles as addressing themselves to the <169>woman question.<170> @BODY SINGLE = 34. Hall, <169>Culture, the Media and the 'Ideological Effect',<170> <MI>op cit<D>., p. 328. @BODY SINGLE = 35. <MI>The Courant<D>, June, 1903. @BODY SINGLE = 36. <MI>Ibid<D>., April, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 37. See, for example, <MI>The Courant<D>, March, 1908; April, 1908; December, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 38. <MI>The Courant<D>, November, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 39. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, November, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 40. <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>, March, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 41. See, for example, <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, February, 1908; June, 1908; July, 1908; and <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>, July, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 42. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, December, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 43. See also <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>, April, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 44. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, April, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 45. <MI>Ibid<D>. @BODY SINGLE = 46. <MI>Ibid<D>., February, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 47. <MI>Ibid<D>. @BODY SINGLE = 48. See, for example, <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, February, 1908; May, 1908; June, 1908; and <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>, March, 1909. @BODY SINGLE = 49. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, October, 1908, and <MI>The Progressive Woman<D>, March, 1909, for example. @BODY SINGLE = 50. <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, May, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 51. <MI>Ibid<D>., June, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 52. <MI>Ibid<D>., November, 1907. @BODY SINGLE = 53. See, for example, <MI>Woman's Tribune<D>, November 3, 1900. @BODY SINGLE = 54. <MI>Ibid<D>., March 3, 1906. @BODY SINGLE = 55. <MI>Ibid<D>., November 10, 1906. @BODY SINGLE = 56. <MI>Ibid<D>., May 9, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 57. For example, <MI>The Courant<D>, March, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 58. <MI>The Courant<D>, May, 1909; May, 1910. @BODY SINGLE = 59. <MI>Ibid<D>., May, 1910. See also <MI>The Courant<D>, May, 1909, regarding changes in tariff bills that would offer protection to working women and an April, 1909, article on women's newly acquired right to vote in Chicago municipal elections, noting Jane Addams' arguments on behalf of wage-earning women. @BODY SINGLE = 60. See, for example, <MI>The Socialist Woman<D>, February, 1908; March, 1908. @BODY SINGLE = 61. <MI>The Courant<D>, June, 1909. Club women began to recognize that their disfranchised status placed them in the same category as the uneducated, the poor and criminals. Reference to <169>paupers and idiots<170> was made by Federation president Sarah S. Platt Decker when she wrote, <169>[T]he men of the suffrage states . . . prefer to have the mothers of their sons and daughters classed as citizens, rather than as 'criminals, paupers and idiots!'<170> @BODY SINGLE = 62. Stuart Hall, <169>The rediscovery of 'ideology': return of the repressed in media studies,<170> in <MI>Culture, Society and the Media<D>, Michael Gurevitch, Tony Bennett, James Curran and Janet Woollacott, eds. (New York and London: Routledge, 1982), pp. 63-64. @BODY SINGLE = 63. Hennessey, <MI>op cit<D>., p. 119. @SUBHEAD = <P11B>SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY<P255D> @BODY BOLD = <P10B>Books<P255D> @BIBLIO TEXT = Althusser, Louis. <MI>Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays<D>. (B. Brewster, trans.) London: Penguin Press. 1971. @BIBLIO TEXT = Barrett, Michele, Philip Corrigan, Annette Kuhn and Janet Wolff, eds. <MI>Ideology and Cultural Production<D>. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Blair, Karen J. <MI>The Clubwoman as Feminist: True Womanhood Redefined, 1868-1914<D>. New York: Holmes and Meier Publishers. 1980. @BIBLIO TEXT = Buechler, Steven M. <MI>Women's Movements in the United States<D>. London: Rutgers University Press. 1990. @BIBLIO TEXT = Buhle, Mari Jo. <MI>Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920<D>. Urbana, Ill: University of Illinois Press. 1981. @BIBLIO TEXT = Christians, Clifford and James Carey. <169>The Logic and Aims of Qualitative Research,<170> in <MI>Research Methods in Mass Communication<D>, 2nd edition, Guido Stempel and Bruce Westley, eds. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1989. @BIBLIO TEXT = Cott, Nancy F. <MI>The Grounding of Modern Feminism<D>. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. 1987. @BIBLIO TEXT = Dicken-Garcia, Hazel F. <MI>Journalistic Standards in Nineteenth-Century America<D>. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. 1989. @BIBLIO TEXT = Dijk, Teun van. <169>Discourse and Cognition in Society,<170> in <MI>Communication Theory Today<D>, David Crowley and David Mitchell, eds. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 1994. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>The Interdisciplinary Study of News as Discourse,<170> in <MI>A Handbook of Qualitative Methodologies for Mass Communication Research<D>, Klaus Bruhn Jensen and Nicholas W. Jankowski, eds. London and New York: Routledge. 1991. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <MI>News Analysis<D>. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. 1988. @BIBLIO TEXT = Dubois, Ellen Carol. <169>Working women, class relations, and suffrage militance: Harriot Stanton Blatch and the New York woman suffrage movement, 1894-1909,<170> in <MI>Unequal Sisters, A Multicultural Reader in United States Women's History<D>, Ellen Carol DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, eds. New York: Routledge. 1990. @BIBLIO TEXT = Eisenstein, Sarah. <MI>Give us Bread but Give us Roses, working women's consciousness in the United States, 1890 to the First World War<D>. London, Boston, Melbourne and Henley: Routledge and Kegan Paul. 1983. @BIBLIO TEXT = Evans, Sara M. <MI>Born for Liberty: A History of Women in America<D>. New York: The Free Press. 1989. @BIBLIO TEXT = Flexner, Eleanor. <MI>Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States<D>. Boston, MA: Harvard University Press. 1975. @BIBLIO TEXT = Foner, Phillip S. <MI>Women and the American Labor Movement: from the first trade unions to the present<D>. New York: Free Press. 1982. @BIBLIO TEXT = Forgacs David and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, eds. <MI>Antonio Gramsci: Selections from Cultural Writings<D>. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 1985. @BIBLIO TEXT = Fowler, Roger. <MI>Language in the News: Discourse and Ideology in the Press<D>. London and New York: Routledge. 1991. @BIBLIO TEXT = Fowler, Roger, Bob Hodge, Gunther Kress, Tony Trew. <MI>Language and Control<D>. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Friedman, Jean E. and William G. Shade. <MI>Our American Sisters: Women in American Life and Thought<D>. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, Inc. 1973. @BIBLIO TEXT = Giddings, Paula. <MI>When and Where I Enter: the impact of Black women on race and sex in America<D>. New York: Morrow. 1984. @BIBLIO TEXT = Golding, Peter and Graham Murdock. <169>Ideology and the Mass Media: The Question of Determination,<170> in <MI>Ideology and Cultural Production<D>, Michele Barrett, Philip Corrigan, Annette Kuhn and Janet Wolff, eds. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Graham, John, ed. <169><MI>Yours for the Revolution<D><170>: <MI>the<D> Appeal to Reason, <MI>1895-1922<D>. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. 1990. @BIBLIO TEXT = Grossberg, Lawrence. <169>Strategies of Marxist Cultural Interpretation,<170> in <MI>Critical Perspectives on Media and Society<D>, Robert K. Avery and David Eason, eds. New York: The Guilford Press. 1991. @BIBLIO TEXT = Hall, Stuart. <169>Signification, Representation, Ideology: Althusser and the Post-Structuralist Debates,<170> in <MI>Critical Perspectives on Media and Society<D>, Robert K. Avery and David Eason, eds. New York: The Guilford Press. 1991. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>Cultural Studies: two paradigms,<170> in <MI>Media, Culture and Society, a Critical Reader<D>, Richard Collins, James Curran, Nicholas Garnham, Paddy Scannell, Phillip Schlesinger and Colin Sparks, eds. Sage Publications. 1986. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>The rediscovery of 'ideology': return of the repressed in media studies,<170> in <MI>Culture, Society and the Media<D>, Michael Gurevitch, Tony Bennett, James Curran and Janet Woollacott, eds. New York and London: Routledge. 1982. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>Culture, the Media and the 'Ideological Effect',<170> in <MI>Mass Communication and Society<D>, James Curran, Michael Gurevitch, Janet Woollacott, eds. Sage Publications. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Hennessy, Rosemary. <MI>Materialist Feminism and the Politics of Discourse<D>. New York and London: Routledge. 1993. @BIBLIO TEXT = Johnson, Richard, <169>Histories of Culture/Theories of Ideology,<170> in <MI>Ideology and Cultural Production<D>, Michele Barrett, Philip Corrigan, Annette Kuhn and Janet Wolff, eds. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kerber, Linda. <MI>Women of the Republic<D>. New York and London: Norton. 1980. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kessler, Lauren. <MI>The Dissident Press<D>. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications. 1984. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kraditor, Aileen S. <MI>The Ideas of the Woman Suffrage Movement, 1890-1920<D>. New York and London: Columbia University Press. 1965. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kraditor, Aileen S., ed. <MI>Up From the Pedestal: Selected Writings in the History of American Feminism<D>. Chicago: Quadrangle Books. 1968. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kress, Gunther R. <MI>Linguistic Processes in Sociocultural Practice<D>. Victoria: Deakin University Press. 1985. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kress, Gunther and Robert Hodge. <MI>Language as Ideology<D>. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Kress, Gunther. <169>Ideological Structures in Discourse,<170> in <MI>Handbook of Discourse Analysis, vol. 4<D>. Teun van Dijk, ed. London: Academic Press. 1985. @BIBLIO TEXT = Lerner, Gerda. <MI>The Majority Finds Its Past: Placing Women in History<D>. New York: Oxford University Press. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Lerner, Gerda, comp. <MI>Black Women in White America; a Documentary History<D>. New York: Pantheon Books. 1972. @BIBLIO TEXT = Marzolf, Marion. <MI>Up from the Footnote: A History of Women Journalists<D>. New York: Hastings House. 1977. @BIBLIO TEXT = Mattelart, Armand. <MI>Mass Media, Ideologies and the Revolutionary Movement<D>. Malcolm Coad, trans. Sussex: Harvester Press. 1980. @BIBLIO TEXT = McRobbie, Angela. <169><MI>Jackie<D>: An Ideology of Adolescent Femininity,<170> in <MI>Popular Culture: Past and Present<D>, Bernard Waites, Tony Bennett and Graham Martin, eds. London: The Open University. 1982. @BIBLIO TEXT = Mouffe, Chantal. <MI>Gramsci and Marxist Theory<D>. London: Routledge. 1979. @BIBLIO TEXT = Rothman, Sheila. <MI>Woman's Proper Place: A History of Changing Ideals and Practices, 1870 to the present<D>. New York: Basic Books. 1978. @BIBLIO TEXT = Solomon, Martha. <MI>A Voice of Their Own<D>. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press. 1991. @BIBLIO TEXT = Steiner, Linda. <169>The History and Structure of Women's Alternative Media,<170> in <MI>Women Making Meaning<D>, Lana F. Rakow, ed. New York: Routledge. 1992. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>Nineteenth-Century Suffrage Periodicals: Conceptions of Womanhood and the Press,<170> in <MI>Ruthless Criticism, New Perspectives in U.S. Communication History<D>, William S. Solomon and Robert W. McChesney, eds. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. 1993. @BIBLIO TEXT = Storey, John. <MI>An Introductory Guide to Cultural Theory and Popular Culture<D>. Athens, GA: The University of Georgia Press. 1993. @BIBLIO TEXT = Tax, Meredith. <MI>The Rising of the Women: Feminist Solidarity and Class Conflict, 1880-1917<D>. New York: Monthly Review Press. 1980. @BIBLIO TEXT = Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn. <169>Discrimination Against Afro-American Women in the Woman's Movement, 1830-1920,<170> in <MI>The Afro-American Woman: Struggles and Images<D>, Sharon Harley and Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, eds. Port Washington, NY: National University Publications. 1978. @BIBLIO TEXT = Turner, Graeme. <MI>British Cultural Studies<D>. New York and London: Routledge. 1992. @BIBLIO TEXT = Wells, Mildred White. <MI>Unity in Diversity: the History of the General Federation of Women's Clubs<D>. Washington: General Federation of Women's Clubs. 1953. @BIBLIO TEXT = Wood, Mary I. <MI>The History of the General Federation of Women's Clubs for the first 22 years of its organization<D>. New York: General Federation of Women's Clubs, History Department. 1912. @BIBLIO TEXT = @BODY BOLD = Articles @BIBLIO TEXT = Baker, Paula. <169>The Domestication of Politics: Women and American Political Society, 1780-1920,<170> <MI>American Historical Review<D> 89. June, 1984. @BIBLIO TEXT = Dye, Nancy Schrom. <169>Creating a Feminist Alliance: Sisterhood and Class Conflict in the New York WTUL, 1903-1914,<170> <MI>Feminist Studies<D>, 2:24-38. 1973. @BIBLIO TEXT = Jacoby, Robin. <169>The Women's Trade Union League and American Feminism,<170> <MI>Feminist Studies<D>, 2:126-140. 1975. @BIBLIO TEXT = Lasser, Carol. <169>Gender, Ideology and Class in the Early Republic,<170> <MI>Journal of the Early Republic<D>, 10:331-337. Fall, 1990. @BIBLIO TEXT = Masel-Walters, Lynne. <169>To Hustle with the Rowdies: The Organization and Functions of the American Suffrage Press,<170> <MI>Journal of American Culture<D> 3. Spring 1980: 166-183. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>A Burning Cloud by Day: The History and Content of the <MI>Woman's Journal<D>,<170> <MI>Journalism History<D> 3:4. Winter 1976-77: 103-110. @BIBLIO TEXT = __________. <169>Their Rights and Nothing More: A History of the <MI>Revolution<D>, 1868-1870,<170> <MI>Journalism Quarterly<D> 53. Summer 1976: 242-251. @BIBLIO TEXT = Mather, Anne. <169>A History of Feminist Periodicals, Part I,<170> <MI>Journalism History<D> 1:3. Autumn 1974: 82-85. @BIBLIO TEXT = Nord, David Paul. <169>Intellectual History, Social History, Cultural History . . . and Our History,<170> <MI>Journalism Quarterly<D> 67:4. Winter 1990: 645-648. @BIBLIO TEXT = Pauly, John. <169>A Beginner's Guide to Doing Qualitative Research in Mass Communication,<170> <MI>Journalism Monographs<D> 125. 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