A social history of the American ideal of feminine beauty chronicles changes in taste, fashion, attitudes, morality, style, and behavior from the eighteenth century to the present
A founder of the field of women's history in the 1970s, Lois Banner is Professor of History Emerita at the University of Southern California. Banner graduated from UCLA, with a Master's Degree in European History and a Ph.D. from Columbia University in American history. Along with Mary Hartman, she founded the Berkshire Conference in Women's History, the biennial conference that has been held ever since and that is considered the major event in the field. She was the first woman president of the American Studies Association, and in 2006 she won the Bode-Pearson prize of the American Studies Association for Lifetime Achievement in the field. Professor Banner is also a past president of the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association, and of the Coordinating Committee in Women's History of the American Historical Association. She has also been a fellow of the Rockefeller Foundation, of the Radcliffe Institute of Harvard College, and of the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia.
An engaging overview of the perception of beauty with a focus on white American women between the Civil War and the start of WWI. Banner concedes in the introduction that there is a heavy focus on NY, and that holds true; you often wonder what you're missing by hearing mostly about the rise of the department store or the emphasis on the trends as set by people like the Astor's. That being said, Banner uses primary sources to supplement what we can glean from art and media of the time to present a steady picture of Beauty with a capital B. The final chapter flew by with little resolution (and no conclusion). In the final chapter I noted how feminism was underscored, yet the development of feminism or the fight for suffrage was less critical throughout prior chapters. It would have been interesting to have the chronological discussions of feminism and beauty.