Semi-finalist, The Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize, awarded by the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals (RSVP), 2012 'An important contribution to girlsâ studies, childrenâs literature, and periodical scholarship, Kristine Moruziâs book provides a nuanced historicizing of the emergence of girls as subject, agent, target audience, and contested ground in relation to mass print culture.' Linda Hughes, Texas Christian University, USA 'Moruziâs highly accessible text [...] reminds us that the Victorian dialogue about what girls were and could be was every bit as vibrant and conflicted as our own.' Childhood in the Past 'Constructing Girlhood through the Periodical Press, 1850-1915 was honoured as a semi-finalist in the Robert and Vineta Colby Book Prize for books published in 2012. The prize is judged by scholars who know the difficulties and benefits of working with periodicals, and the recognition of Kristine Moruziâs work is a fitting acknowledgement of its careful methodology and thought-provoking conclusions.' Victorian Periodicals Review 'Historians will find this book of particular interest because it marks the increasing mobility and independence of girls in a shifting cultural milieu. Childhood studies students will find here a model for dissertations that dialogue culture and childhood. Literary critics will also enjoy the dialogue between fiction, columns, letters, and images in periodicals...' Childrenâs Literature Association Quarterly âThis book is a very valuable and thought-provoking contribution to the field of the periodical press studies, and a must-have for any researcher of Victorian and early Edwardian studies.â Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardians âHer analyses provide a wealth of information both on the magazines she discusses, and on the cultural climate' surrounding the topics in focus, and hence her study is definitely worth reading.â Anglistik â...for people interested in the early magazines f