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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Streible Endnote 10

Robert McIlvaine, “Edith Wharton’s American Beauty Rose,” Journal of American Studies 7, no. 2 (1973): 183–85. Wharton’s The House of Mirth (Scribner’s, 1905) was serialized in Scribner’s Magazine. The book’s frontispiece, drawn by illustrator A. B. Wenzell, depicts protagonist Lily (age twenty-nine) standing on a stairway, surrounded by bouquets, looking disenchanted—even pained—as leisure-class guests gather in her parents’ home. The unmarried woman bears some resemblance—in coiffure, dress, bearing, and porcelain-skinned whiteness—to the anonymous filmed beauty of 1906. Although there is no direct connection between the novel’s complex character and the film’s fleeting anonymous model, both are represented as a type drawn from the era’s iconography.

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