This study provides a qualitative exploration of juvenile biographies of
women, a genre defined here as a book dealing with the whole or partial
life of an individual and reviewed as nonfiction for readers in
elementary, middle, or junior high school. Beginning with a survey of
juvenile material on Elizabeth Tudor published in England and the United
States between 1852 and 2002, author Gale Eaton scrutinizes thirty-four
books-juvenile biographies, histories, and collected biographies-for
trends in both content and rhetoric. Well-Dressed Role Models: The
Portrayal of Women in Biographies for Children then goes on to look at
close readings of books published in the United States in the years
1946, 1971, and 1996 and presents a penetrating analysis of a genre that
serves the needs of youth. The findings of this study include the fact
that juvenile biographies make role models out of women who, in many
cases, never would have become famous by following all the rules for
good girls. By choice of subject and emphasis, their authors dress the
life stories of real women in the appropriate values of new generations.
Three appendixes providing annotated book lists for each of the three
years analyzed conclude this study.