Description
About the Author
William Knox is Senior Lecturer in Scottish History at the University of St Andrews. K is the author of Hanging By a Thread: the Scottish cotton industry, c.1850-1914 (Carnegie, Preston, 1995); James Maxton (MUP, 1987); Scottish Labour Leaders, 1918-1939: a Biographical Dictionary (Mainstream, 1984); and Industrial Nation: Work, Culture and Society in Scotland, 1800-Present (EUP, 1999).
Reviews
A collection of essays focusing on the life and work of ten individuals. Some are well-known names, if not well-known lives - Elsie Inglis, Katherine, the 'Red Duchess' of Argyll; others more obscure - Eliza Wigham (anti-slavery and women's rights activist), Mary Brooksbank (Dundee radical and poet). The aim is to provide not just individual portraits of women, but to contribute to our understanding of women's roles over 200 years. The chronological arrangement of the essays means that they can be read almost as a continuous narrative, which highlights change but also underlines the persistence of patriarchal attitudes. Willa Muir (born 1890), wife of Edwin, may have had a very different life from Jane Welsh Carlyle, born 90 years earlier and wife of Thomas, but both lived in the shadow of their husbands, and suffered for it. The essays are a tale of struggle - for love, for qualifications, for opportunity, for recognition ! The particular value of these essays is that they are anchored in social, political and professional contexts, which illuminate the lives and are in turn illuminated by them. -- Jenni Calder A collection of essays focusing on the life and work of ten individuals. Some are well-known names, if not well-known lives - Elsie Inglis, Katherine, the 'Red Duchess' of Argyll; others more obscure - Eliza Wigham (anti-slavery and women's rights activist), Mary Brooksbank (Dundee radical and poet). The aim is to provide not just individual portraits of women, but to contribute to our understanding of women's roles over 200 years. The chronological arrangement of the essays means that they can be read almost as a continuous narrative, which highlights change but also underlines the persistence of patriarchal attitudes. Willa Muir (born 1890), wife of Edwin, may have had a very different life from Jane Welsh Carlyle, born 90 years earlier and wife of Thomas, but both lived in the shadow of their husbands, and suffered for it. The essays are a tale of struggle - for love, for qualifications, for opportunity, for recognition ! The particular value of these essays is that they are anchored in social, political and professional contexts, which illuminate the lives and are in turn illuminated by them.
Book Information
ISBN 9780748617883
Author William Knox
Format Paperback
Page Count 240
Imprint Edinburgh University Press
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Weight(grams) 400g
Dimensions(mm) 234mm * 156mm * 23mm