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The Lady's Realm

The Lady's Realm was a British women's magazine published from 1896 until 1914, possibly until 1915. It primarily targeted upper-class readers as well as an aspirational middle-class audience, featuring photographs, poems, fiction, and columns by popular authors such as Marie Corelli, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Jack London, and H. G. Wells. The London Season was regularly covered, with visuals of significant society figures and débutantes appearing. Fashion trends in Paris and London were frequently discussed as well, particularly by its fashion editor Marian Pritchard.

The Lady's Realm
Vol. 9, no. 54 of The Lady's Realm (1901)
EditorWilliam Henry Wilkins (1896–1902)
First issueNovember 1896
Final issueOctober 1914, possibly 1915
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The publication's targeted reader was the "New Woman", with enlightened ideas on education, health, independence, and employment. More successful than many of its contemporary publications, the magazine sold reasonably well in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada. It was a staple of women's reading rooms in public libraries, which were widespread across the UK. Relatively little is known of The Lady's Realm's publishing history, as many records were destroyed during the London Blitz. Its end may have been due to the First World War.

History edit

Relatively little is known of The Lady's Realm's publishing history, as many records of its publisher, Hutchinson, were destroyed during the London Blitz.[1] The first issue was published in November 1896.[1][2] Its first editor was William Henry Wilkins, a mildly successful novelist who oversaw the publication's editing from 1896 to 1902.[3] Though inexperienced,[1] Wilkins was acquainted with society, being a friend of such figures as the explorer Richard Francis Burton and his wife Isabel Burton.[4] After Wilkins' death in 1905, The Lady's Realm wrote of how "the general public are little aware how much of [the magazine's] early success" was due to him, and that "not a few [contributors who] have since made their names in the world of letters have to thank him for placing their foot on the first rung of the ladder".[1] Wilkins' successor as editor is unknown, though Margaret Versteeg and colleagues, who produced an index of the fiction published in The Lady's Realm, detect no changes in editorial judgement in the magazine's tenure after 1902. While the publication mainly featured female writers and feminine topics, all of its editors, most likely, were men.[1]

When it debuted, there were more than twenty-nine publications catering to women. Upon the publication of its first issue in 1896, Review of Reviews called it "one of the most popular of the magazines that have been started this year".[1] The illustrated magazine was produced monthly[5] and cost sixpence (cheap enough for middle-class readers).[3] A typical issue contained 120 pages on quality glossy paper.[1] It sold reasonably well in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada.[1] The magazine was available in women's reading rooms in public libraries, locations that were well distributed across the United Kingdom.[5][6]

The magazine was produced by the English printers Hazell, Watson and Viney. One of its owners, Walter Hazell, was a social reformer and supporter of women's suffrage. A successful firm, Hazell, Watson and Viney also produced the Woman's Signal and the Woman's Gazette, which featured female political and economic topics.[7] The success of The Lady's Realm allowed it to remain published for eighteen years, from 1896 to 1915, much longer than many other contemporary women's periodicals.[3] Thirty-six volumes were produced, from November 1896 to October 1914 (a final volume may have been released in 1915). It is not known why it ended, though Versteeg and her colleagues speculate that World War I may have been a cause, as was the case for other contemporary publications like Young Woman (1891–1914) and The Girl's Realm (1892–1915).[1]

Content edit

The magazine focused on an upmarket audience, targeting "aspirational middle-class and upper-class readers".[5][8] It was also one of the first intended to appeal to the female homeowner.[9] The Lady's Realm featured poems,[1] engravings and photographs, as well as columns by popular authors like Marie Corelli, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Violet Fane, and Mary Elizabeth Braddon.[3][5] Other authors included Jack London, H.G. Wells, and Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman.[3] Fiction, in the form of short stories and serialisations, was released during the magazine's entire span and took up a sizable proportion in issues. A slightly higher percentage[clarification needed] of these contributions were written by women. The type of fiction varied, from romances and domestic narratives to fantasies and sociopolitical stories.[1] The publication's targeted reader was the "New Woman", with enlightened ideas on education, health, independence, and employment. Victorian scholar Kathryn Ledbetter notes that The Lady's Realm was "a handbook to the New Woman then being successfully marketed in popular novels... it provides many examples of this ideal in essays, illustrations, fiction, and poetry through the late 1890s".[4]

Lady's Realm printed an assortment of Court and society news alongside articles on more daily tasks such as food, homemaking, and methods for female readers to earn money.[1] It covered the London Season, displaying photographs of significant society figures and débutantes.[10] It claimed to feature over 500 illustrations in each volume.[3] Theatre was another regular topic of the magazine,[11] as was fiction, poetry, and reports on fashion.[5] The Lady's Realm's fashion editor Marian Pritchard regularly wrote articles on emerging fashions in London and Paris, and recommended locations where readers could buy them.[12] While still featuring fashion and beauty, it also encouraged careers for women in music, art, business, and millinery.[13] The magazine maintained this blend of topics relatively consistently, though it gradually made minor changes to the proportion it focused on different topics, for instance later focusing less on the nobility and more on the lives of clergymen and governors general.[1]

The Lady's Realm was a source of celebrity journalism.[5] Ledbetter writes that the magazine inherited its "notions of feminine celebrity" from The Woman's World, an earlier publication edited by Oscar Wilde.[3] It published studio photographs of actresses as well as aristocrats, including many in the former group who married into the nobility.[14] The British Royal Family was a frequent subject; one of the magazine's first issues included an article and photographs about the Princess of Wales' childhood, and the publication regularly reported on the movements of Queen Victoria's family.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Versteeg, Thomas & Huddleston 1981.
  2. ^ Lady's Realm 1896.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Ledbetter 2009, p. 55.
  4. ^ a b Ledbetter 2009, pp. 55–56.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Doughty 2008, p. 342.
  6. ^ Baggs 2005, pp. 280–282.
  7. ^ Weedon 2008, p. 276.
  8. ^ Fawcett 2004, p. 149.
  9. ^ Latimer 1988, p. 18.
  10. ^ Fawcett 2004, p. 147.
  11. ^ Fawcett 2004, pp. 149–50.
  12. ^ Buckley & Fawcett 2002, p. 32.
  13. ^ Fawcett 2004, p. 156.
  14. ^ Buckley & Fawcett 2002, p. 22.
  15. ^ Ledbetter 2009, pp. 55, 58.

Works cited edit

  • Baggs, Chris (2005). ""In the Separate Reading Room for Ladies Are Provided Those Publications Specially Interesting to Them": Ladies' Reading Rooms and British Public Libraries 1850–1914". Victorian Periodicals Review. 38 (3): 280–306. doi:10.1353/vpr.2005.0028. JSTOR 20084071. S2CID 162252878. (subscription required)
  • Buckley, Cheryl; Fawcett, Hilary (2002). Fashioning the Feminine: Representation and Women's Fashion from the Fin De Siècle to the Present. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 1860645062.
  • Doughty, Terri (2008). "Lady's Realm [1896–1915]". In Brake, Laurel; Demoor, Marysa; Beetham, Margaret (eds.). Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland. Academia Scientific. p. 342. ISBN 978-9038213408.
  • Fawcett, Hilary (2004). "Romance, glamour and the exotic: Feminism and fashion in Britain in the 1900s". In Heilmann, Ann; Beetham, Margaret (eds.). New Woman Hybridities: Femininity, Feminism, and International Consumer Culture, 1880–1930. Routledge. pp. 145–57. ISBN 0415299837.
  • "Lady's Realm: An Illustrated Monthly Magazine". The Lady's Realm. 1. London: Hutchinson and Co. 1896.
  • Latimer, Clare (1988). "The Division of the Wall: The Use of Wallpapers in Decorative Schemes, 1870–1910". The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society. 1 (12): 18–25. JSTOR 41809161. (subscription required)
  • Ledbetter, Kathryn (2009). British Victorian Women's Periodicals: Beauty, Civilization, and Poetry. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0230601260.
  • Versteeg, Margaret; Thomas, Sue; Huddleston, Joan, eds. (1981). Index to Fiction in The Lady's Realm. University of Queensland. ISBN 086776032X.
  • Weedon, Alexis (2008). "Hazell, Watson and Viney Limited". In Brake, Laurel; Demoor, Marysa; Beetham, Margaret (eds.). Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland. Academia Scientific. pp. 276–277. ISBN 978-9038213408.

lady, realm, british, women, magazine, published, from, 1896, until, 1914, possibly, until, 1915, primarily, targeted, upper, class, readers, well, aspirational, middle, class, audience, featuring, photographs, poems, fiction, columns, popular, authors, such, . The Lady s Realm was a British women s magazine published from 1896 until 1914 possibly until 1915 It primarily targeted upper class readers as well as an aspirational middle class audience featuring photographs poems fiction and columns by popular authors such as Marie Corelli Frances Hodgson Burnett Jack London and H G Wells The London Season was regularly covered with visuals of significant society figures and debutantes appearing Fashion trends in Paris and London were frequently discussed as well particularly by its fashion editor Marian Pritchard The Lady s RealmVol 9 no 54 of The Lady s Realm 1901 EditorWilliam Henry Wilkins 1896 1902 First issueNovember 1896Final issueOctober 1914 possibly 1915CountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglish The publication s targeted reader was the New Woman with enlightened ideas on education health independence and employment More successful than many of its contemporary publications the magazine sold reasonably well in the United States the United Kingdom and Canada It was a staple of women s reading rooms in public libraries which were widespread across the UK Relatively little is known of The Lady s Realm s publishing history as many records were destroyed during the London Blitz Its end may have been due to the First World War Contents 1 History 2 Content 3 References 3 1 Works citedHistory editRelatively little is known of The Lady s Realm s publishing history as many records of its publisher Hutchinson were destroyed during the London Blitz 1 The first issue was published in November 1896 1 2 Its first editor was William Henry Wilkins a mildly successful novelist who oversaw the publication s editing from 1896 to 1902 3 Though inexperienced 1 Wilkins was acquainted with society being a friend of such figures as the explorer Richard Francis Burton and his wife Isabel Burton 4 After Wilkins death in 1905 The Lady s Realm wrote of how the general public are little aware how much of the magazine s early success was due to him and that not a few contributors who have since made their names in the world of letters have to thank him for placing their foot on the first rung of the ladder 1 Wilkins successor as editor is unknown though Margaret Versteeg and colleagues who produced an index of the fiction published in The Lady s Realm detect no changes in editorial judgement in the magazine s tenure after 1902 While the publication mainly featured female writers and feminine topics all of its editors most likely were men 1 When it debuted there were more than twenty nine publications catering to women Upon the publication of its first issue in 1896 Review of Reviews called it one of the most popular of the magazines that have been started this year 1 The illustrated magazine was produced monthly 5 and cost sixpence cheap enough for middle class readers 3 A typical issue contained 120 pages on quality glossy paper 1 It sold reasonably well in the United Kingdom the United States and Canada 1 The magazine was available in women s reading rooms in public libraries locations that were well distributed across the United Kingdom 5 6 The magazine was produced by the English printers Hazell Watson and Viney One of its owners Walter Hazell was a social reformer and supporter of women s suffrage A successful firm Hazell Watson and Viney also produced the Woman s Signal and the Woman s Gazette which featured female political and economic topics 7 The success of The Lady s Realm allowed it to remain published for eighteen years from 1896 to 1915 much longer than many other contemporary women s periodicals 3 Thirty six volumes were produced from November 1896 to October 1914 a final volume may have been released in 1915 It is not known why it ended though Versteeg and her colleagues speculate that World War I may have been a cause as was the case for other contemporary publications like Young Woman 1891 1914 and The Girl s Realm 1892 1915 1 Content editThe magazine focused on an upmarket audience targeting aspirational middle class and upper class readers 5 8 It was also one of the first intended to appeal to the female homeowner 9 The Lady s Realm featured poems 1 engravings and photographs as well as columns by popular authors like Marie Corelli Frances Hodgson Burnett Violet Fane and Mary Elizabeth Braddon 3 5 Other authors included Jack London H G Wells and Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman 3 Fiction in the form of short stories and serialisations was released during the magazine s entire span and took up a sizable proportion in issues A slightly higher percentage clarification needed of these contributions were written by women The type of fiction varied from romances and domestic narratives to fantasies and sociopolitical stories 1 The publication s targeted reader was the New Woman with enlightened ideas on education health independence and employment Victorian scholar Kathryn Ledbetter notes that The Lady s Realm was a handbook to the New Woman then being successfully marketed in popular novels it provides many examples of this ideal in essays illustrations fiction and poetry through the late 1890s 4 Lady s Realm printed an assortment of Court and society news alongside articles on more daily tasks such as food homemaking and methods for female readers to earn money 1 It covered the London Season displaying photographs of significant society figures and debutantes 10 It claimed to feature over 500 illustrations in each volume 3 Theatre was another regular topic of the magazine 11 as was fiction poetry and reports on fashion 5 The Lady s Realm s fashion editor Marian Pritchard regularly wrote articles on emerging fashions in London and Paris and recommended locations where readers could buy them 12 While still featuring fashion and beauty it also encouraged careers for women in music art business and millinery 13 The magazine maintained this blend of topics relatively consistently though it gradually made minor changes to the proportion it focused on different topics for instance later focusing less on the nobility and more on the lives of clergymen and governors general 1 The Lady s Realm was a source of celebrity journalism 5 Ledbetter writes that the magazine inherited its notions of feminine celebrity from The Woman s World an earlier publication edited by Oscar Wilde 3 It published studio photographs of actresses as well as aristocrats including many in the former group who married into the nobility 14 The British Royal Family was a frequent subject one of the magazine s first issues included an article and photographs about the Princess of Wales childhood and the publication regularly reported on the movements of Queen Victoria s family 15 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Versteeg Thomas amp Huddleston 1981 Lady s Realm 1896 a b c d e f g Ledbetter 2009 p 55 a b Ledbetter 2009 pp 55 56 a b c d e f Doughty 2008 p 342 Baggs 2005 pp 280 282 Weedon 2008 p 276 Fawcett 2004 p 149 Latimer 1988 p 18 Fawcett 2004 p 147 Fawcett 2004 pp 149 50 Buckley amp Fawcett 2002 p 32 Fawcett 2004 p 156 Buckley amp Fawcett 2002 p 22 Ledbetter 2009 pp 55 58 Works cited edit Baggs Chris 2005 In the Separate Reading Room for Ladies Are Provided Those Publications Specially Interesting to Them Ladies Reading Rooms and British Public Libraries 1850 1914 Victorian Periodicals Review 38 3 280 306 doi 10 1353 vpr 2005 0028 JSTOR 20084071 S2CID 162252878 subscription required Buckley Cheryl Fawcett Hilary 2002 Fashioning the Feminine Representation and Women s Fashion from the Fin De Siecle to the Present I B Tauris ISBN 1860645062 Doughty Terri 2008 Lady s Realm 1896 1915 In Brake Laurel Demoor Marysa Beetham Margaret eds Dictionary of Nineteenth century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland Academia Scientific p 342 ISBN 978 9038213408 Fawcett Hilary 2004 Romance glamour and the exotic Feminism and fashion in Britain in the 1900s In Heilmann Ann Beetham Margaret eds New Woman Hybridities Femininity Feminism and International Consumer Culture 1880 1930 Routledge pp 145 57 ISBN 0415299837 Lady s Realm An Illustrated Monthly Magazine The Lady s Realm 1 London Hutchinson and Co 1896 Latimer Clare 1988 The Division of the Wall The Use of Wallpapers in Decorative Schemes 1870 1910 The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society 1 12 18 25 JSTOR 41809161 subscription required Ledbetter Kathryn 2009 British Victorian Women s Periodicals Beauty Civilization and Poetry Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0230601260 Versteeg Margaret Thomas Sue Huddleston Joan eds 1981 Index to Fiction in The Lady s Realm University of Queensland ISBN 086776032X Weedon Alexis 2008 Hazell Watson and Viney Limited In Brake Laurel Demoor Marysa Beetham Margaret eds Dictionary of Nineteenth century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland Academia Scientific pp 276 277 ISBN 978 9038213408 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Lady 27s Realm amp oldid 1167799345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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