Freedom, Sincerity, and the Modern Woman in the Interwar Romances of Berta Ruck

Berta Ruck’s interwar romance novels address contemporary anxieties about the changing role of women in Britain after 1918. Ruck’s novels focus both on the modern woman in contrast to the Victorian woman, and the extent to which modernity and the new freedoms wrought by the First World War emancipat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bonnie White
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association for the Study of Popular Romance (IASPR) 2022-02-01
Series:Journal of Popular Romance Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jprstudies.org/2022/02/freedom-sincerity-and-the-modern-woman-in-the-interwar-romances-of-berta-ruck/
Description
Summary:Berta Ruck’s interwar romance novels address contemporary anxieties about the changing role of women in Britain after 1918. Ruck’s novels focus both on the modern woman in contrast to the Victorian woman, and the extent to which modernity and the new freedoms wrought by the First World War emancipated women from the traditionalisms of the pre-war period. Over the course of the interwar period, however, Ruck began to question whether young women were embracing the full potential of their new freedoms or if they were trading one kind of conformity for another. Ruck challenges young women to dispense with unnecessary labels – mods versus the conventional woman – that prevent women from understanding and embracing their true selves. Ruck delays the expected happy ending until the protagonists reject the performative modernity of societal expectations – a journey centered around new employment and courtship rituals that came to define the modern woman – and arrive at a true understanding of self, accomplished by embracing sincerity and emotional honesty.
ISSN:2159-4473