Reflecting self-image : "girlhood" interiors, 1875-1910
Sarah Anne Carter (Author), J. Ritchie Garrison (Degree supervisor), University of Delaware (Degree granting institution), University of Delaware Reflecting self-image : "girlhood" interiors, 1875-1910
This thesis considers two main categories of spaces: adolescent girls' bedrooms at home and dormitory rooms at school. Through photographic and manuscript sources, enhanced by design books, fiction, and periodicals, the rooms and the objects in them are tools for understanding white, elite adolescent girls and college women coming of age between 1875 and 1910. The adolescent girls' bedroom at home was a transitional and a highly charged space. As girls matured they made the transition from nursery to bedroom. Adolescent girls' active participation in room design explicitly connected maturity with the power to design and to create an independent identity. With a focus on Smith College, college dorm rooms complicated this notion. Public opinions concerning "college girls," personal relationships, financial pressures and personal interests shaped the process of individualizing the suite of standard issue bedroom furniture. Captured in photographs, constellations of objects and ephemera in the dorm room, especially the decoration on the dressing table, reflected various ways in which adolescent girls and college women saw themselves and wanted to be perceived. Carefully arranged dorm rooms offered college women the opportunity to craft a self-image of femininity and independence through interior design
Academic Dissertation
ix, 106 leaves : illustrations ; 28 cm
56723042
Principal faculty advisor: J. Ritchie Garrison, Department of History
Degree concentration and program. Early American Culture, in the Winterthur Program in Early American Culture