Nina Leen
"Tulsa Twins: They Show how much the Teen-Age World has Changed"Seven months later, June 11, 1945, Leen revisted the teenager's livelihood, but this time photographed boys. The photo-essay, "Teen-Age Boys: Faced with war, they are the same as they have always been," ...
As American life transitioned postwar, the livelihood of teenage girls flourished. "Tulsa Twins: They Show how much the Teen-age World has Changed" showcases the transformation in teen girls, such as presenting cutting-edge, trendsetting, “New Look” clothing that made girls look more flirty and feminine.
In an up-close-and-personal photo shoot, serving as representatives for all teen girls nationwide, identical twins Barbara and Betty Bounds show off their fashion style, social life, and domestic tasks. “Tulsa Twins” welcomes you visually into the fashionable social world of middle-class, postwar teen girlhood, where being a lady requires domestic responsibility and acceptance to be “one of the crowd,” and in which “parties with boys are their favorite things in life.”
This page has paths:
- "Tulsa Twins: They Show how much the Teen-Age World has Changed" Maureen Kudlik
- Analyzing Post-World War II Teenage Social Norms in LIFE Magazine Maureen Kudlik
- Nina Leen Micah Ariel
- Nina Leen Micah Ariel
- Nina Leen Micah Ariel
- Creating a Visual Culture through Print Media Maureen Kudlik