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"Incarnations and Practices of Feminine Rectitude: Nineteenth-Century Gymnastics for U.S. Women".


Ann Chisholm, "Incarnations and Practices of Feminine Rectitude: Nineteenth-Century Gymnastics for U.S. Women"

Between 1830-1870, a number of influential texts promoting gymnastics deemed appropriate for U.S. women claimed that those exercise regimes would cultivate feminine rectitude along postural, moral, and procedural lines. In doing so, while promising at once to straighten women's spines, to increase their chest size as well as their lung capacities, and to foster beauty and grace, those discourses promoted a female figure that stood in direct opposition to contemporary representations of incapable housekeepers and useless invalids. Many gymnastics regimens thus functioned as disciplinary mechanisms that sought to forge docile doc·ile  
adj.
1. Ready and willing to be taught; teachable.

2. Yielding to supervision, direction, or management; tractable.
 bodies, to infuse in·fuse
v.
1. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles.

2. To introduce a solution into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes.
 those bodies with (disciplinary) temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty  
n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties
1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time.

2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy.

Noun 1.
, to encourage habits of precision, system, and order, and to cultivate postures and sensibilities of feminine rectitude that would reconcile (true) women with conceptions of domesticity Domesticity
See also Wifeliness.

Crocker, Betty

leading brand of baking products; byword for one expert in homemaking skills. [Trademarks: Crowley Trade, 56]

Dick Van Dyke Show, The
 that required them to conceal the strains of their duties. Those gymnastics systems, then, encouraged U.S. women and girls to refigure their physiques and their identities as social subjects: to materially constitute themselves in clearly identifiable ways as healthy, pious, and thus authentically true women who had inherited crucial traits of Republican Motherhood The of this article or section may be compromised by "weasel words".
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COPYRIGHT 2005 Journal of Social History
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Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:ABSTRACTS
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 22, 2005
Words:193
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