The American Beauty Industry Encyclopedia
Editat de Julie Willetten Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 mai 2010 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780313359491
ISBN-10: 0313359490
Pagini: 364
Ilustrații: 34 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.93 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0313359490
Pagini: 364
Ilustrații: 34 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.93 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Some three dozen photographs capture various aspects of this pervasive industry
Notă biografică
Julie Willett is associate professor of history at Texas Tech University, Lubbock.
Cuprins
List of EntriesList of Entries by TopicPrefaceIntroductionChronologyThe EncyclopediaAppendix 1: Percentage of U.S. Beauty Industry Employees by Occupation, Sex, Race, and Ethnicity, 2007Appendix 2: Number of Salon-Type Establishments in the United States with Payroll EmployeesSelected BibliographyIndexAbout the Editor and Contributors
Recenzii
Beginning with Acne, and ending with Wolf, Naomi this encyclopedia of beauty related phenomenon contains 116 entries. Practices, products, icons, media, and institutions pertaining to the American beauty industry are explained and analyzed in one to four page entries. Contributors include academics in the fields of history, women's studies, fashion, and other social sciences. Although a time-line of important beauty related events and discoveries covering the period from 30,000B.C.E. to 2009 is presented at the beginning, the encyclopedia's focus is on the late nineteenth and twentieth century. Entries contain suggestions for further reading and many include black and white photographs.
Opening with a chronology that locates the genesis of beauty concerns in Paleolithic haircutting tools, Willett (Permanent Waves) brings together the scholarship of 42 field specialists. Each contributes several article-style entries on industry entrepreneurs, corporations, oppositional figures, advertising outlets, beauty rituals, beauty plagues, and occasionally frightening 'therapeutic' techniques. These alphabetized entries run several pages in length, are divided by subject heading, and feature informative illustrations, pull-quotes, and sidebars. A ten-page bibliography rounds out this absorbing term-focused subject overview. A wonderful complement to the subject histories Kathy Peiss's Hope in a Jar and Teresa Riordan's Inventing Beauty.
Willett's coverage of the multibillion-dollar beauty industry will make this title popular in academic, community college, and public libraries.
Recommended. Academic collections supporting lower and upper-level undergraduates and two-year technical program students; general readers.
This encyclopedia is an admirable overview of the modern American beauty industry. It is also a valuable reflection of the multidisciplinary nature of the industry and should attract the interests of those in diverse fields, such as cultural studies, gender studies, sociology, history, marketing, media studies, art, and fashion. It is recommended for academic libraries serving these and related departments. . . . This volume is also recommended for public libraries, where even the casual reader will likely have an interest in the topic.
Opening with a chronology that locates the genesis of beauty concerns in Paleolithic haircutting tools, Willett (Permanent Waves) brings together the scholarship of 42 field specialists. Each contributes several article-style entries on industry entrepreneurs, corporations, oppositional figures, advertising outlets, beauty rituals, beauty plagues, and occasionally frightening 'therapeutic' techniques. These alphabetized entries run several pages in length, are divided by subject heading, and feature informative illustrations, pull-quotes, and sidebars. A ten-page bibliography rounds out this absorbing term-focused subject overview. A wonderful complement to the subject histories Kathy Peiss's Hope in a Jar and Teresa Riordan's Inventing Beauty.
Willett's coverage of the multibillion-dollar beauty industry will make this title popular in academic, community college, and public libraries.
Recommended. Academic collections supporting lower and upper-level undergraduates and two-year technical program students; general readers.
This encyclopedia is an admirable overview of the modern American beauty industry. It is also a valuable reflection of the multidisciplinary nature of the industry and should attract the interests of those in diverse fields, such as cultural studies, gender studies, sociology, history, marketing, media studies, art, and fashion. It is recommended for academic libraries serving these and related departments. . . . This volume is also recommended for public libraries, where even the casual reader will likely have an interest in the topic.