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When the Girls Come Out to Play

Teenage Working-Class Girls' Leisure between the Wars

By (author) Dr Katharine Milcoy
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, London, United Kingdom
Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
Published: 7th Sep 2017
Dimensions: w 156mm h 234mm d 11mm
Weight: 431g
ISBN-10: 1474279597
ISBN-13: 9781474279598
Barcode No: 9781474279598
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Synopsis
Filling a long-standing gap both in women's history and in the material history of class culture, this book is a unique and necessary reassessment of the social and cultural scene during the inter-war period in England. By combing over the everyday practices of working-class girls in 1920s and 30s England, including a sharp focus on Bermondsey south-east London and oral testimony from women who grew up in the period, Milcoy demonstrates the persistence and ingenuity with which these teenagers gained access to the commercial leisure culture of the day, from hairstyles and fashionable dress to films, music, and dances. She shows how this access had a startling ripple effect, transforming the way young women rehearsed and contested their identities so that play, rather than work, became the primary mechanism for defining subjectivity and constructing femininity. When the Girls Come Out to Play is a refreshing and nuanced take on the social and cultural history of England between the World Wars.

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This book has a great deal to offer to historians teaching undergraduate modules on gender, leisure, class, childhood and youth, and inter-war Britain ... Milcoy presents some important material that contributes to a re-consideration of the emergence of the 'teenager' and the ways that young women experienced leisure in inter-war England. * Journal of Contemporary History * This is a history of leisure that takes working class girls seriously. Whilst female leisure choices were not infrequently castigated by social commentators, Milcoy shows that young women themselves grasped the opportunities available to them for pleasure. The sources are very well used and include the records of girls' organisations and a lovely collection of oral history interviews. This book is a real pleasure to read. * Claire Langhamer, Professor of Modern British History, University of Sussex, UK *