Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Above is a list of article citations about the American "Gilded Age", an era of great social and economic change in the second-half of the nineteenth century. |
Citations can vary tremendously in size. The highlighted citation above is very large, filling-up much of four lines. |
In contrast, the top-most citation to the right is so small as to be difficult to even notice. In spite of its brevity (it is just one line!) it is a complete citation. |
Click on the title Brush above. |
Good! There are TWO more single-word (or EQUIVALENT) journal titles in the highlighted citations above. Find and click on each one. |
Excellent! In most indexes single-word periodical titles are NOT abbreviated. Indeed, it would be difficult to abbreviate titles for such well-known magazines as Life or Time or Ms. |
However, multi-word periodical titles ARE abbreviated. Find each one of these in the citations above by clicking it. |
Module 3 finished. to Menu. |