Studies of the representation of women in United States history textbooks, both in number and manner in which they appear, have found women are inequitably represented as compared to their male counterparts and are viewed through a patriarchal lens. This study analyzed a contemporary high school United States history textbook’s representation of women in the Progressive Era compared to an earlier edition textbook. Using their visual representation of women, it was found that the textbooks continued the patriarchal view of women and their roles in society. Although the number of representations of women had slightly increased over time, these additions did not promote a more contemporary view of women's role in history, except in the area of women's rights. Recommendations for future areas of research are made. Some are: monitoring of textbooks for equability, analyzing of textbooks covering U.S. history prior to 1877 for equability in inclusion of women in history, investigating what teachers are doing to compensate for the inequity, determining whether or not state standards are inclusive of women's history, and analyzing how women's history in college level textbooks represent women in history.
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1 March 2016
Research Article|
March 01 2016
The Progressive Era: How American History Textbooks' Visuals Represent Women Available to Purchase
Frances Janeene Williams;
Frances Janeene Williams
1
Pettis County R-V School District
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Linda B. Bennett
Linda B. Bennett
2
University of Missouri
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Emerald Publishing Limited
2016
Social Studies Research and Practice (2016) 11 (1): 124–135.
Citation
Williams FJ, Bennett LB (2016), "The Progressive Era: How American History Textbooks' Visuals Represent Women". Social Studies Research and Practice, Vol. 11 No. 1 pp. 124–135, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/SSRP-01-2016-B0008
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