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A Fanny Fern Reader : Selections by a Pioneering Nineteenth-Century Woman Journalist / Fanny Fern ; edited and with an introduction by Emily E. VanDette.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Fern, Fanny, 1811-1872, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- American essays.
- Newspapers--Sections, columns, etc.
- Newspapers.
- Journalism--United States--History--19th century.
- Journalism.
- United States--Social conditions--To 1865.
- United States.
- New York (N.Y.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
- New York (N.Y.).
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (309 pages)
- Edition:
- First edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Albany, NY : State University of New York Press, [2024]
- Summary:
- The most complete collection of works by the nineteenth century's most famous and groundbreaking woman journalist.
- Contents:
- Intro
- Contents
- Introduction
- Note on the Text
- I. "These are some of the annoyances of authors
- but, verily, they have their rewards too": On Authorship and Authors
- Borrowed Light, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, 1853
- Mrs. Adolphus Smith Sporting the "Blue Stocking," from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, Second Series, 1854
- American Female Literature, Letter from Fanny Fern, June 16, 1854
- My Old Ink-Stand and I
- or, the First Article in the New House, July 19, 1856
- Answers to Fern Correspondents, November 15, 1856
- To Literary Aspirants, December 6, 1856
- Leaves of Grass, May 10, 1856
- Charlotte Brontë, June 6, 1857
- Facts for Unjust Critics, June 13, 1857
- To Writers, August 22, 1857
- Fresh Leaves, by Fanny Fern, October 10, 1857
- International Copyright, November 28, 1857
- A Rainy Day, February 20, 1858
- A Leaf for Paul Pry, June 19, 1858
- A Sketch for Paul Pry, March 26, 1859
- Pleasures of Authorship, February 23, 1861
- Answers to My Own Correspondents, March 2, 1861
- Unscrupulous Authors, April 20, 1861
- Literary Beginners, March 26, 1864
- Who Shall Decide When Doctors Disagree, October 26, 1867
- Punishments and Rewards of Authors, March 2, 1872
- II. "Mr. Chairman, I rise to say, that there are no faults of sex
- that there exist only faults of individuals": On Society's Rules and Roles for Men and Women
- Sober Husbands, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, Second Series, 1854
- Hungry Husbands, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, Second Series, 1854
- Feminine Waiters at Hotels, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, Second Series, 1854
- The Last Bachelor Hours of Tom Pax, January 19, 1856
- Tom Pax's Conjugal Soliloquy, February 9, 1856
- Summer Travel, July 12, 1856
- Moral Molasses
- or, Too Sweet by Half, October 4, 1856.
- A Gauntlet for the Men, February 21, 1857
- Lady Doctors, April 11, 1857
- On Voices and Beards, April 3, 1858
- A Chapter for the Brethren, May 22, 1858
- Hear! Hear!, June 12, 1858
- Gimcrack Furniture, December 18, 1858
- A Hint for Shopping Husbands, March 19, 1859
- "Oh, the Extravagance of Women!," July 16, 1859
- Why Rosa Bonheur Don't Marry, December 31, 1859
- Male-Mischief, February 25, 1860
- Books of "Advice to Women," March 17, 1860
- "Pencilings by the Way," March 31, 1860
- Guilty or Not Guilty, April 7, 1860
- A Hue and Cry from the Other Side of the House, May 5, 1860
- Male-Gossips, July 28, 1860
- What Constitutes a Handsome Man, March 16, 1861
- A Stone for a Glass House, April 27, 1861
- A Bit of Injustice, June 8, 1861
- Lady Letter-Writers, June 15, 1861
- Tell Us, August 31, 1861
- An Offer, March 22, 1862
- Tit for Tat-Tling, March 29, 1862
- Which?, May 24, 1862
- Back Track on the Platform, March 30, 1872
- III. "These are bold words
- but they are needed words": On Women's Rights
- The Weaker Vessel, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, 1853
- Has a Mother a Right to Her Children?, April 4, 1857
- A Word on the Other Side, October 24, 1857
- "Where Have I Been, and What Have I Seen?," December 19, 1857
- Is Not Woman Capable of It?, December 26, 1857
- Lady-Skating, March 20, 1858
- "What Is My Opinion about Woman Voting?," May 29, 1858
- "Independence," July 30, 1859
- Was She a Heroine, or a Criminal?, October 8, 1859
- Shall Women Vote?, June 30, 1860
- On the Fence, November 9, 1861
- A Public Evil, February 1, 1862
- The Women of 1867, August 10, 1867
- Woman's Qualification to Vote, May 23, 1868
- Woman's Millenium, from Ginger-Snaps, 1870
- Women on the Platform, from Ginger-Snaps, 1870
- Clubs for the Working Men, March 16, 1872.
- IV. "I wish I was mother to the whole of you!": On Behalf of Children
- Children's Rights, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, 1853
- Children in 1853, from Little Ferns for Fanny's Little Friends, 1854
- The "Favorite" Child, February 28, 1857
- Parent and Child
- or, Which Shall Rule, May 9, 1857
- The Child Whom Nobody Can Do Anything With, January 23, 1858
- To My Little Ledger Friends, April 10, 1858
- A Word for the Children, July 3, 1858
- A Whisper to Mothers, April 16, 1859
- A Nursery Thought, April 14, 1860
- A Whisper to Mothers, August 25, 1860
- How to Look at It, May 4, 1861
- A Word to Parents, July 27, 1861
- Mercy for Children, November 30, 1861
- The Use of Grandmothers, May 23, 1863
- A Chapter for Mothers, May 30, 1863
- A Chapter for Parents, August 29, 1863
- A Grandmother's Dilemma, June 30, 1866
- What Childhood Should Be, October 19, 1867
- Grandmothers, June 15, 1872
- How to Put the Children to Bed, from Caper-Sauce, 1872
- On School Reform
- A Word to Parents and Teachers, March 14, 1857
- One More-"Last Word," October 29, 1859
- Philanthropy in the Right Direction, March 24, 1860
- The Children's Day, June 2, 1860
- Writing "Compositions," June 9, 1860
- At Last, November 24, 1860
- Half a Loaf Better Than No Bread, February 22, 1862
- A Fatal Error, February 11, 1865
- Will Parents Take Heed?, from Caper-Sauce, 1872
- V. "How I longed to sit down in those little tents, and talk with those heroes of Gettysburg": Select Commentary about the Civil War
- The Time to Speak, June 1, 1861
- Baby-Regiments, August 24, 1861
- Election-Day, December 28, 1861
- Holidays and Holy-People, January 11, 1862
- A Fifth Avenue Scene, July 4, 1863
- Our City Camps, September 26, 1863
- The Chief Obstacle to Enlistments, March 5, 1864
- Unwritten History of the War, from Folly as It Flies, 1868.
- The History of Our Late War, from Ginger-Snaps, 1870
- VI. "More than angelic are these soul-responses": On Grief, Suffering, and Compassion
- New York, from Fresh Leaves, 1857
- A Word to Shop-Keepers, June 20, 1857
- Mother's Room, August 15, 1857
- What Shall We Name the Baby?, August 22, 1857
- To Young Ladies, December 5, 1857
- What Came of a Violet, May 8, 1858
- Blackwell's Island Number I, August 14, 1858
- Blackwell's Island, Number III, August 28, 1858
- Sympathy
- or, Straws for the Drowning, May 21, 1859
- Night and Sleep, December 24, 1859
- Vivid Life, August 3, 1861
- Whose Business Is It?, September 28, 1861
- Poisoned Arrows, May 10, 1862
- How They Look at It, May 30, 1863
- VII. "New York, with all thy faults, I love thee still": On Life in the City
- Greenwood and Mount Auburn, September 6, 1856
- Knickerbocker and Tri-Mountain, October 11, 1856
- Knickerbocker and Tri-Mountain, Number 2, October 18, 1856
- Living in Brooklyn, January 2, 1858
- Why I Like New York, June 5, 1858
- The Rival Cities, December 18, 1858
- A Phase of City Life, October 22, 1859
- A Housekeeper's Views on Street-Cleaning, December 3, 1859
- Dear Crazy Gotham, June 22, 1861
- New York Parks, September 21, 1861
- Central Park and Boston Common, November 16, 1867
- About Some Things in New York Which Have Interested Me, from Folly as It Flies, 1868
- A Morning at Stewart's, from Folly as It Flies, 1868
- The Working-Girls of New York, from Folly as It Flies, 1868
- Getting Away from the City
- Trip to the Caatskills, Number One, September 12, 1857
- Trip to the Caatskills, Number Four, October 3, 1857
- Notes of a Summer Tour, Number VI, October 9, 1858
- A Broad Hint to New Haven, August 3, 1867
- VIII. "Coats and trowsers have the best of it everywhere": On Gendered Fashion
- A Law More Nice than Just, July 10, 1858.
- A Law More Nice than Just, Number II, July 17, 1858
- Give It Up, January 7, 1860
- A Voice from the Skating Pond, February 1, 1862
- Sense and Shoes, February 8, 1862
- Fashion Edicts, April 26, 1862
- What May Be Done in the Country, September 14, 1867
- IX. "What a pity all editors are not gentlemen": On Newspapers and Editors
- Editors, from Fern Leaves from Fanny's Port-Folio, 1853
- A Breakfast Reverie on Ledger Day, November 6, 1858
- For Whom the Cap Fits, November 20, 1858
- Comic Tragedies, October 29, 1859
- A Word to Editors, January 21, 1860
- Gentle Shepherd Tell Me Why?, February 16, 1861
- The Fly in the Ointment, from Ginger-Snaps, 1870
- Some Hints to Editors, from Ginger-Snaps, 1870
- X. "I am sick of flummery and nonsense and humbug and pretension of every kind": On Pet Peeves, Nuisances, and Miscellaneous Grievances
- A Headache, March 21, 1857
- In the Dumps, July 4, 1857
- A Hot Day, August 15, 1857
- Aunt Peckey, January 15, 1859
- Have You Ever Seen Him?, January 29, 1859
- Going to Move, April 9, 1859
- A Social Nuisance, May 7, 1859
- A Gauntlet for a Vermonter, May 14, 1859
- Clumsy People, May 28, 1859
- Uncourteous Audiences, February 4, 1860
- The Whistling Nuisance, March 3, 1860
- "When I Was in Paris," April 28, 1860
- Smoking in the City Cars, July 21, 1860
- An Honest Growl, November 17, 1860
- Compulsory Shopping, February 9, 1861
- The Reason Why, March 2, 1861
- Canes, May 11, 1861
- Noseology, January 18, 1862
- Modern Martyrs, February 1, 1862
- Educational Mistakes, April 5, 1862
- An Unpleasant Truth, May 17, 1862
- Kinks, May 25, 1867
- My Grievance, from Caper-Sauce, 1872
- XI. "… there are days when it is simply blessing enough to be alive": On Life's Simple Pleasures
- Breakfast, March 14, 1857
- Fanny Fern on Sleigh-Riding, January 5, 1861.
- Spring Time, May 18, 1861.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 1-4384-9853-5
- OCLC:
- 1441720664
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