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• An engaging look at the impact of feminism and gender studies on the writing of history in the second half of the 20th century. • Clearly written and accessible, the book traces the theoretical debates about the nature and scope of the history of gender in a comprehensible, appealing manner.
Why are most famous historians men? How have women changed the
writing of history over the last decades? What lives and stories
have been hidden from history? Until recently history was
predominantly the domain of men. That men were the authors of our
past meant that in many cases only half of the story was told. In
the second half of the twentieth century, however, the picture
changed. Women, and indeed some men as well, started to address
gender history. Women had been investigated historically before,
but never with such intensity, nor such breadth. The impetus for
this writing was both political and academic as feminists were
determined to explore lives which until then had been disregarded.
Gender and the Historian charts the entry and development of this
new history, showing how such considerations furthered
postmodernism and ultimately reinvigorated the very core of
History..
This book provides an accessible introduction to the life, work,
and particularly the ideas of Eleanor Rathbone. A prominent figure
in British politics, both as a suffragist and as a Member of
Parliament, she is best known today as the leading proponent for
the introduction of family allowances. Johanna Alberti outlines and
explores the development of Eleanor Rathbone's ideas presenting
them in the political and intellectual context of her time - a
period of major change for women. Beginning with a survey of
Eleanor Rathbone's personal and ideological heritage, the text goes
on to examine her move from philanthropy to political action, her
ideas on suffrage, and her astute approach to questions of equality
and difference. The book also considers the impetus behind her
entry into parliament, the way she expressed and shaped her ideas
within a parliamentary setting, her involvement in Indian affairs,
and finally her passionate commitment to the cause of refugees.
This book provides an accessible introduction to the life, work,
and particularly the ideas of Eleanor Rathbone. A prominent figure
in British politics, both as a suffragist and as a Member of
Parliament, she is best known today as the leading proponent for
the introduction of family allowances. Johanna Alberti outlines and
explores the development of Eleanor Rathbone's ideas presenting
them in the political and intellectual context of her time - a
period of major change for women. Beginning with a survey of
Eleanor Rathbone's personal and ideological heritage, the text goes
on to examine her move from philanthropy to political action, her
ideas on suffrage, and her astute approach to questions of equality
and difference. The book also considers the impetus behind her
entry into parliament, the way she expressed and shaped her ideas
within a parliamentary setting, her involvement in Indian affairs,
and finally her passionate commitment to the cause of refugees.
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