• Order to parcel locker

    Order to parcel locker
  • easy pay

    easy pay
  • Reduced price
Lady Lushes: Gender, Alcoholism, and Medicine in Modern America

Lady Lushes: Gender, Alcoholism, and Medicine in Modern America

9780813576985
549.99 zł
494.99 zł Save 55.00 zł Tax included
Lowest price within 30 days before promotion: 494.99 zł
Quantity
Product unavailable
Temporarily unavailable

  Delivery policy

Choose Paczkomat Inpost, Orlen Paczka, DPD or Poczta Polska. Click for more details

  Security policy

Pay with a quick bank transfer, payment card or cash on delivery. Click for more details

  Return policy

If you are a consumer, you can return the goods within 14 days. Click for more details

Description
According to the popular press in the mid twentieth century, American women, in a misguided attempt to act like men in work and leisure, were drinking more. “Lady Lushes” were becoming a widespread social phenomenon. From the glamorous hard-drinking flapper of the 1920s to the disgraced and alcoholic wife and mother played by Lee Remick in the 1962 film “Days of Wine and Roses,” alcohol consumption by American women has been seen as both a prerogative and as a threat to health, happiness, and the social order.   In Lady Lushes , medical historian Michelle L. McClellan traces the story of the female alcoholic from the late-nineteenth through the twentieth century. She draws on a range of sources to demonstrate the persistence of the belief that alcohol use is antithetical to an idealized feminine role, particularly one that glorifies motherhood. Lady Lushes offers a fresh perspective on the importance of gender role ideology in the formation of medical knowledge and authority.
Product Details
Eurospan
69508
9780813576985
9780813576985

Data sheet

Publication date
2017
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
234
Dimensions (mm)
152.00 x 229.00
  • Introduction 1. The Female Inebriate in the Temperance Paradigm 2. “Lit Ladies”:: Women’s Drinking during the Progressive Era and Prohibition 3. “More to Overcome Than the Men”:: Women in Alcoholics Anonymous 4. Defining a Disease:: Gender, Stigma, and the Modern Alcoholism Movement 5. “A Special Masculine Neurosis”:: Psychiatrists Look at Alcoholism 6. “The Doctor Didn’t Want to Take an Alcoholic”:: The Challenge of Medicalization at Mid-Century Epilogue Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
Comments (0)