Introduction
Part One: Hybridities
1. Bertha Thomas: The New Women and Ango-Welsh Hybridity Kirsti Bohata
2. A Hungarian New Woman Writer and a Hybrid Autobiographical Subjact: Margit Kaffka's 'Lyrical Notes of a Year' Nóra Séllei
Part Two: Through the (Periodical) Looking Glass
3. Writing Women's History: 'The Sex' Debates of 1889 Laurel Brake
4. The American New Women and her influence on the Daughters of the Empire of British Columbia in the Daily Press (1880-1895) Françoise Le Jeune
5. Locating the Flapper in Rural Irish Society: The Irish Provincial Press and the Modern Woman in the 1920s Louise Ryan
6. Subverting the Flapper: The Unlikely Alliance of Irish Popular and Ecclesiastical Press in the 1920s Maryann Gialanella Valiulis
7. Riding the Tiger: Ambivalent Images of the New Woman in the Popular Press of the Weimar Republic Ingrid Sharp
Part Three: Communities of Women
8. Romance, Glamour and the Exotic: Feminity and Fashion in Britain in the 1900s Hilary Fawcett
9. Charged with Ambiguity: The Image of the New Women in American Cartoons Angelika Köhler
10. The day of the Girl: Nell Brinkley and the New Woman Trina Robbins
11. 'The Woman of the Twentieth Century': The Feminist Vision and its Reception in the Hungarian Press 1904-1914 Judit Acsády
12. The New Woman in Japan: Radicalism and Ambivalence toward Love and Sex Kazue Muta
Part Four: Race and the New Woman
13. 'Natural' Divisions/National Divisions: Whiteness and the American New Woman in the General Federation of Women's Clubs Jill Bergman
14. The Birth of National Hygiene and Efficiency: Women and Eugenics in Britain and America 1865-1915 Angelique Richardson