A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More Information

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More Information Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More information Index Abram, Annie 10, 115 Bergson, Henri (1859—1941) 58 account rolls 119 Besant, Annie (1847-1933) 90, 93 Adams, Herbert Baxter 7 Beveridge, William (later Lord) (1879-1963) Adams, W. G. S. 163 109, 146, 199 Agathon 59 birth control 45n, 145 All-India Home Rule League 89 Black Death 7, 132 Amritsar massacre 89, 92, 93, 148 Bloch, Marc (1886-1944) 2, 14, 56n., 61, 62, Angel, Norman 147 169,198, 200, 208-17, 221, 249, 250, 252, Anglo-American Historical Conference 166 254, 260 Annales d'histoire economique et sociale 210-11, 251 Bognetti, G. P. 214, 215 Annales school 211, 251 Bosanquet, Bernard 224 Anstey, Vera Powell (1889-1976) 70,157, 168 Bowley, Sir Arthur L. (1869-1957) 144-5,J^2 anthropology 5, 162, 165, 212 Brace, Donald 169, 185 anti-Semitism 60, 61, 236, 240 Braudel, Fernand 251 Apostles 39 Braudel, Paule 194 archaeology 208 British Federation of University Women 135, Armstrong, Edward (1846—1928) 36—7, 65,134 i36n., 177, 178 Ashley, W. J. 166 Brittain, Vera 25-6, 28, 29, 40, 77-8, 80 Ashton, T. S. 252 Brogan, D. W. 163 Atkinson, Mabel 66, 68 Brooke, Z. N. 36, 207 Austrian school of economics 165 Browning, Oscar 85-6 Bryn Mawr College, USA 7,169, 177, 261 BBC 224, 232—4 Biicher, Karl 119, 208, 211 bankruptcy 18 Buer, Mabel Craven 11, 70, 168 Barker, Ernest (1874-1960) 224 Burma 97-9 Barnard College, USA 158, 172, 177, 178 Burns, Arthur 145 Baron, Lily 82 Burns, Eveline Richardson (1900-85) 144,187 Bateson, Mary (1865-1906) 6, 9-10, 115 Bury, J. B. 8 Baynes, Norman H. 214 Beales, Hugh Lancelot A. (1889-1988) 144, Cadbury, Laurence 169, 252 i5<>> i57> *59»160,170,183 Cam, Helen 49, 66, 112-13,168,196,197, Beard, M. G. 'Barbula' 38, 78, 153, i55n., 209 240-1, 251 Bedier, Joseph 62 Cambridge University 8, 35, 38, 76, 77, 141 Beggs, Mary 234 degrees for women 108-9, H0? J42 Behrens, Betty 252 Camden Society 112 Benedictine rule 119,121 Canada 107 Bennett, H. S. 85,134, 250 Cannadine, David 10, 12,195, 248 Bennett, Judith in., 7n., 8n., ion. Cannan, Edwin 145, 146, 182 Benson, Stella (1892-1933) 174-5, X79 Cantor, Norman 8n., 260-1 Berenson, Mary Pearsall Smith (formerly Mrs Cape, Jonathan 169, 252 Frank Costelloe) 50, 51 Carpenter, Edward 91 285 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More information 286 Index Carr-Saunders, Sir Alexander M. (1886-1966) Dalton, Hugh (1887-1962) 52n., 145, 146, 252 162-3, 239, 24° Carus-Wilson, Eleanora (1897-1977) 180, 214, Davenport, Frances 247 250 Davies, Emily 27-8 Catharism, Order of the Beguines 126 Davis, E. Jeffries 160 Catholic Revival in Davis, H. W. C. 224 Ceylon 121 Davis, Natalie Zemon 1, 251, 260 Chibnall, Marjorie 253 Dickinson, Goldsworthy Lowes (1862-1932) China 4, 99-107, iO5n., 151, 171-2 35-6, 72, 83, 85n., 102-3, IO5>Io6 Cistercians 116 Dixon, Elizabeth 9,115 Clapham, Antonia (god-daughter) 245 Dopsch, Alfons i55n., 209, 211, 215 Clapham, John Harold (later Sir) (1873-1946) Downs, Elizabeth 'Pico' 38, 78, 79, 245 8, 85,107-8, 167, 169, 193-4, 199, 207, Dreyfus affair 57, 60 210-16, 229, 239, 240, 252-6 Dunlop, Joyce 70 Clapham, Margaret 84, 85,167, 194 Durand, Marguerite 60 Clapham, Michael (later Sir) i54n., 167 Durbin, Evan 153,159, 163, 190, 239, 240 Clark, Alice (1874-1934) 9, 11, 26n., 67, 70, Durkheim, Emile 59 135,143. 25O Dyer, Reginald (General) 90, 148 Clark, G. Kitson 6n., 8n. Clark, G. N. 169, 191, 252 Eberstadt, Rudolf 211 Clarke, Peter 12 Eckenstein, Lina 9,10, 114 Clegg, Benson William (grandfather) 17, 20, Ecole des Chartes 37, 38, 55, 61, 62 23,37 Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales Clegg, Henry (uncle) 16, 18 62, 251 Clegg, Ivy (aunt) 20, 23, 73, 168, 193 Economic History Review 157, 158,166-8, 210, Clegg, Lilian (aunt) 20, 23 221 l l Clio, muse of history 1,133, 246, 257, 262 Economic History Society 166-9, %9> 9& clothes 4, 30-2, 35, 51, 64, 81, 85, 107,154, 254 Women's Committee xiii, xiv Clothworkers Scholarship 27 eugenics 22, 53 Cole, G. D. H. 204 Coleman, Donald Cuthbert (1920—95) 12 Fabian Women's Group 66n., 67, 68 College de France 56, 58, 62 fabliaux 126 Congress of Vienna 78,183 fascism 211, 214-15 Cornell University 177 Fawcett, Millicent Garrett Anderson 26, 4m., Costelloe, Karin (1889-1953) (Mrs Adrian 53, 54 Stephen) 38, 41, 50-5, 60, 76, 82, 140 Fawcett, Philippa 41 Costelloe, Ray (Mrs Oliver Strachey) 50-3, Febvre, Lucien 56n., 61,166, 194, 210, 211, 124-5 212 Coulton, Gordon George (1858—1947) 8, 36, feminism 9, 54, 7m., 115,135n., 139, 143, 152, 73—5, 83—5,102, 108, 113, 116,122—3, 161, 261 128, 133-9, I5IJ J53> 200, 209, 210, 252, Firth, Sir Raymond 146, 194 254 Fisher, F. J. ('Jack') (1908-88) 144^, 151,157, Council for the Preservation of Business 161, 183 Archives 160 Fletcher, C. R. L. 224 court rolls 202, 247 Ford lectures 3,197-9, 208, 218-20, 252-3 Courtney, William J. 8n. Forster, E. M. 83, 98 Cowell, John (godson) 245 Fox, Ruth (Mrs Hugh Dalton) 52, 82 Creighton, Dr Mandell 6 Foxwell, H. S. 182 Crittall, Elizabeth 243, 244 France, Anatole 61 Crommelin, Constance (Mrs John Masefield) Freeman, Edward 111 41 Fry, Isabel 41 Crouzet, Francois 249 Cunningham, William (1849-1919) 8, 33, 70 Gaitskell, Hugh (1906-63) 153, 163,190, 238, Curtis, Lionel (1872-1955) 191 240, 245 customs accounts 160, 259 Gamble, Jane Catherine 27, 76 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More information Index 287 Gamble Prize 76 Hawgood, J. A. 163 Gandhi, M. K. 89-94 Hayek, F. A. 146, 165 Ganshof, F. 216 higher education for women 6,14, 25, 27-9, Gardner, Alice 138 3°> 32-3, 76, "4> I2i-2, 135-6, i4O-3> Gargoyle Club 154-5 177-8 Garrett, Margaret Lois 'Margery' (Mrs Hill, Bridget 6, i22n. Dominick Spring Rice) (1887-1970) 21, historian-citizen 136-7 23, 26, 31, 34, 38, 41-8, 52, 54, 60, 63, historiography 1, 61,116, 2O2n., 203-5 65-6, 68, 77-8, 81-2,107,109,140,178, history 181, 215 archival based 6, 134,137 Gasquet, Cardinal 74,116 comparative economic 113, 136, 159, 202 Gay, E. F. 169 economic and social 3, 5-6,10,12, 75-6, Geddes, Patrick 89 116,130,134-5, 138, 140,148-51,164, gender 1, 2, 5, 8n., 9, 11, 32, 77, 81, 89, 94, 166, 167, 200, 217, 248 119-20, 129,181-2, gothic revival no George, Mary Dorothy Gordon (1878-1971) legal-constitutional 112-13,115,134,202,205 11, 26n., 70, i6on., 250 legal-manorial 113,134, 203, 206 German historical school 7, 70,114, i89n., literary synthetic 113,130—4, 137 202, 207, 211-12, 224, 246 medieval 3, 5, 6,10, 61, 64-5, 86,110-23, Gierke, Otto von 202-4 11511., 124, 130-9 Gilchrist scholarship 38 municipal 6, 115 Gildersleeve, Virginia 136,177 narrative 134, 246 Ginsberg, Morris 146 nationalist 137 Girton College, Cambridge 9, 27-34, 3%> 7^> 'new' 134, 138 79, 81 relation to social sciences 4, 8, 9,162—3, J^9 chaperones 32 religious/ecclesiastical 7, 10, 74-6,103, corridors 29 113-15, 121,152 dons and history tutors 32 scientific 112,138 gyps 28 world 136-9 jug 29 history tripos, Cambridge 35 Gittings, Jo Manton 181 Hitchcock, Curtice 185 Gooch, G. P. 184 Hobhouse, L. T. 146, 224 Gorton, Neville 65 Hobson, J. A. 256 Graham, Rose 7, 115,116 Hodgkins, Winifred Howard 30, 81 Gras, N. S. B. 169 Holy Roman Empire 201, 204, 235-6 Gray, Howard L. 169, 218 Holtby, Winifred 40 Gregory, Sir Theodore E. G. (1890-1970) Hong Kong 99 146, 162 'Honorary Powers' 87, 184-5, *86 Green, Alice Stopford 194 Huillard-Breholles, Jean Louis A. (1817-71) Green, J. R. 8, in and Mme 56 Hutchins, B. L. ('Bessie') 11, 66n, 67, 68, 71 Halevy, Elie (1870-1937) 59 Hyett, V. A. 169 Halevy, Florence 59, 194, 244 Hyslop, J. 169 Halifax, Earl (E. F. L. Wood) 239 Hall, Hubert (1857-1944) 68, 71, 72, 73,156, India 87-98 157, 218 Industrial Revolution 10, 151 Hammond, Barbara (1873-1962) 8, 11,136, Institute of Historical Research 168 151,176, 194 Institute of Pacific Relations 172, 175,179, Hammond, J. L. (1872-1949) 8, n, 136, 151, 183, 228 176, 229 Institute of Sociology Conference on Social Hanseatic League 209, 221 Sciences 163, 190 Hanson, Lucy 138 International Federation of University Harris, Jose 10 Women 135-6,177—8 Harrison, Amy 67 International Historical Congress 166 Hassall, A. 224 internationalism 130, 135,151-2, 200-2, 211 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Index More information 288 Index Japan ioo, 104-5 London School of Economics (LSE) 9, Jex-Blake, Katherine 34, 81, 82, 108 65-73, 77, I(>8,123-4, 136* i4o-7> 166, Johnston, Sir Reginald Fleming (1874-1938) 210, 212 4, 101-2, 171-6, 178-9, 192 economic history courses at 155-6 Jones, Emila Beatrice ('Topsy') (Mrs Peter family allowances 145 Lucas) 45, 60 socialism and Fabianism at 147 Jones, Emily E.
Recommended publications
  • Revue Française De Civilisation Britannique, XXVI-1 | 2021 Rhoda Power, BBC Radio, and Mass Education, 1922-1957 2
    Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique French Journal of British Studies XXVI-1 | 2021 The BBC and Public Service Broadcasting in the Twentieth Century Rhoda Power, BBC Radio, and Mass Education, 1922-1957 Rhoda Power, la radio de BBC, et l’education universelle, 1922-1957 Laura Carter Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/rfcb/7316 DOI: 10.4000/rfcb.7316 ISSN: 2429-4373 Publisher CRECIB - Centre de recherche et d'études en civilisation britannique Electronic reference Laura Carter, “Rhoda Power, BBC Radio, and Mass Education, 1922-1957”, Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique [Online], XXVI-1 | 2021, Online since 05 December 2020, connection on 05 January 2021. URL: http://journals.openedition.org/rfcb/7316 ; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/rfcb.7316 This text was automatically generated on 5 January 2021. Revue française de civilisation britannique est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 4.0 International. Rhoda Power, BBC Radio, and Mass Education, 1922-1957 1 Rhoda Power, BBC Radio, and Mass Education, 1922-1957 Rhoda Power, la radio de BBC, et l’education universelle, 1922-1957 Laura Carter AUTHOR'S NOTE I would like to thank Peter Mandler and Rozemarijn van de Wal for supporting and advising me on the research behind this article, and Louise North of the BBC Written Archives Centre and the anonymous reviewer for this journal for their help in the preparation of this article. The BBC copyright content reproduced in this article is courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • GENDER in HISTORY
    Susan M. Johns - 9781526137555 Downloaded from manchesterhive.com at 09/29/2021 10:23:54PM via free access GENDER in HISTORY Series editors: Pam Sharpe, Patricia Skinner and Penny Summerfield The expansion of research into the history of women and gender since the 1970s has changed the face of history. Using the insights of feminist theory and of historians of women, gender historians have explored the configura- tion in the past of gender identities and relations between the sexes. They have also investigated the history of sexuality and family relations, and analysed ideas and ideals of masculinity and femininity. Yet gender history has not abandoned the original, inspirational project of women’s history: to recover and reveal the lived experience of women in the past and the present. The series Gender in History provides a forum for these developments. Its historical coverage extends from the medieval to the modern periods, and its geographical scope encompasses not only Europe and North America but all corners of the globe. The series aims to investigate the social and cultural constructions of gender in historical sources, as well as the gendering of historical discourse itself. It embraces both detailed case studies of spe- cific regions or periods, and broader treatments of major themes. Gender in History titles are designed to meet the needs of both scholars and students working in this dynamic area of historical research. Noblewomen, aristocracy and power in the twelfth-century Anglo-Norman realm i Susan M. Johns - 9781526137555 Downloaded from manchesterhive.com at 09/29/2021 10:23:54PM via free access Seal of Alice, Countess of Northampton (1140–60, Egerton Ch.431).
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction 1
    NOTES Introduction 1. Bernard Capp, When Gossips Meet: Women, Family, and Neighborhood in Early Modern England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003). 2. Sandy Bardsley, Venomous Tongues: Speech and Gender in Late Medieval England (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006). 3. Patricia Meyer Spacks, Gossip (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1985), 5. 4. Thelma Fenster and Daniel Lord Smail, ed., Fama: The Politics of Talk and Reputation in Medieval Europe (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003), 1. 5. Judith M. Bennett, “Medievalism and Feminism,” Speculum 68.2 (1993): 327. 6. Laura Gowing, Domestic Dangers: Women, Words, and Sex in Early Modern London (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996); Garthine Walker, Crime, Gender and Social Order in Early Modern England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003); Capp, When Gossips Meet; Bardsley, Venomous Tongues; Martin Ingram, Church Courts, Sex and Marriage in England, 1570–1640 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987); David Cressy, Birth, Marriage, and Death: Ritual, Religion, and the Life-Cycle in Tudor and Stuart England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997); Cynthia J. Neville, “Widows of War: Edward I and the Women of Scotland during the War of Independence,” in Wife and Widow in Medieval England, ed., Sue Sheridan Walker (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1993), 109–139; J. A. Sharpe, Defamation and Sexual Slander in Early Modern England: The Church Courts at York, Borthwick Papers 58 (Heslington, York: University of York, Borthwick Institute of Historical Research, 1980); Susan Amussen, An Ordered Society: Gender and Class in Early Modern England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988); Tim Stretton, Women Waging Law in Elizabethan England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998); Pamela Allen Brown, Better a Shrew than a Sheep: Women, Drama, and the Culture of Jest in Early Modern England (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003); Kim M.
    [Show full text]
  • On Eileen Power's Early Career Persona Formation
    Van de Wal CONSTRUCTING THE PERSONA OF A PROFESSIONAL HISTORIAN: ON EILEEN POWER’S EARLY CAREER PERSONA FORMATION AND HER YEAR IN PARIS, 1910-1911 ROZEMARIJN VAN DE WAL ABSTRACT The medieval historian Eileen Power (1889-1940) was one of Britain’s most eminent female historians of the first half of the twentieth century. Becoming Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics in 1931, Power gained academic recognition to a degree that was difficult for women to obtain in this period. Numerous writings on Power discuss the period 1920-1921, when she travelled around the world as an Albert Kahn Fellow, considering it a formative year in her career and indicating the importance of travel for achieving scholarly success. In contrast, little attention has been paid to the significance of Power’s first academic journey in 1910-1911, when she spent a year in Paris. This stay abroad would however be equally important since it was then that she decided to pursue a career in medieval history. At the time, even if women had an academic degree, they were not self-evident, professional scholars. Therefore, the main question in this article is whether and how Power started to build her scholarly persona while in Paris, attempting to construct an identity for herself as a credible and reliable academic. This will be addressed by analysing her personal writings; specifically, her diary and her letters to her close friend, Margery Garrett. KEY WORDS Biography; Life-writing; Scholarly Persona; Historian; INTRODUCTION When British medieval historian Eileen Power died in August 1940, she was at the height of her career.
    [Show full text]
  • Twentieth-Century Jewish Émigrés and Medieval European Economic History
    Religions 2012, 3, 556–587; doi:10.3390/rel3030556 OPEN ACCESS religions ISSN 2077-1444 www.mdpi.com/journal/religions Article Twentieth-Century Jewish Émigrés and Medieval European Economic History Julie Mell Department of History, North Carolina State University, Campus Box 8108, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA; E-Mail: [email protected]; Tel.: +1-919-382-9202; Fax: +1-919-382-9269 Received: 31 May 2012; in revised form: 13 June 2012 / Accepted: 14 June 2012 / Published: 27 June 2012 Abstract: This essay discusses the intellectual contributions of five Jewish émigrés to the study of European economic history. In the midst of the war years, these intellectuals reconceptualized premodern European economic history and established the predominant postwar paradigms. The émigrés form three distinct groups defined by Jewish identity and by professional identity. The first two (Guido Kisch and Toni Oelsner) identified as Jews and worked as Jewish historians. The second two (Michal Postan and Robert Lopez) identified as Jews, but worked as European historians. The last (Karl Polanyi) was Jewish only by origin, identified as a Christian socialist, and worked first as an economic journalist, then in worker's education and late in life as a professor of economics. All five dealt with the origin of European capitalism, but in different veins: Kisch celebrated and Oelsner contested a hegemonic academic discourse that linked the birth of capitalism to Jews. Postan and Lopez contested the flip-side of this discourse, the presumption that medieval Europe was pre-capitalist par excellence. In doing so, they helped construct the current paradigm of a high medieval commercial revolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic History at the London School of Economics & Political
    Economic History at the London School of Economics & Political Science: A View from the Periphery1 Colin M. Lewis 1 Introduction This paper explores the role of economic history at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and contributions by economic historians to the intellectual and institutional development of the School. From the inception of LSE, economic history was a key component of research and teaching. Although such language would not have been used by contemporaries, when LSE was established in 1895, economic history may have been considered as a laboratory of the social sciences and a bridge between economics and other social science disciplines. A characteristic of economic historians at the School, even before the formation of the Department of Economic History, was methodological diversity, and an emphasis on the applied. These traits were sustained as the group grew and the Department developed. Given this plurality in approach, which contributed and contributes to the depth and range of research and teaching at LSE, it would be a mistake to expect the formation of a distinct School of Aldwych Economic History, as occurred, for example, with the Vienna School of Economics, or economics at Cambridge, or the Manchester School of Economic History associated with George Unwin in the 1920s. The paper opens with a stylised description of the discipline and its development over time, 1 This paper has benefited from conversations (including email ‘conversations) and exchanges with many colleagues and associates. These include Christopher Abel, Gareth Austin, Dudley Baines, Maxine Berg, Stephen Broadberry, Leslie Hannah, Janet Hunter, Eddie Hunt, Helena Ivins, Tracy Keefe, Loraine Long, Mary Morgan, Patrick O’Brien, Linda Sampson and Jim Thomas.
    [Show full text]
  • A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Excerpt More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Excerpt More information CHAPTER I Introduction Women's writing has been a subject of enduring interest, but it is only recently that women's historical writing has attracted attention. This is despite the place history was accorded among the arts during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, when history repres- ented the highest form of literature after poetry. Clio, the muse of history, was represented as a woman. As a woman she inspired the prophets and bards of history. The muses were appealed to during the Renaissance as presiding over the high disciplines where intelli- gence, memory and inspiration were required. Natalie Davis has written that the muse 'embodied in her female form the arts that men practiced ... she favoured them from without and represented their activities and the qualities to which they must aspire.' Did the muse write history herself, or were any of her prophets women? It is at first sight difficult to answer this question, for the great historians who are remembered, Thucydides, Gibbon, Hume, Macaulay, Ranke, Maitland and others, were men, and the historical profession, progressing through various schools of history - the German historical school, the Annales school, the students of Croce, and English social history - seemed to be masculine. Biographies of Toynbee, Namier, Bloch and Trevelyan have appeared in recent years. The History Men dominate our view of the profession. My book stands apart from - and challenges - this tradition of historiography. It is the story of one woman's quest to write history and to make an impact on her discipline and on the culture of her time.
    [Show full text]
  • Tesis Asier Hernandez A
    Departamento de Historia Contemporánea 2020 Mención “Doctorado Internacional” Nations on Paper Nation building and historical practice in China and Britain (1880-1930) Thesis Dissertation by Asier H. Aguirresarobe Directed by Prof. Ludger Mees 2 Abstract We, living in contemporary societies in which the nation-state is the hegemonic political organisation, hardly ever ask ourselves how national identities are produced and reproduced, or even how they first came into being. To most of us, history offers a continuous account that explains the past as a tale of national development, and that therefore legitimises the nation’s present status and claims. It is the objective of this research to trace the transition to this nationalist worldview in China and Britain, and to compare how the adoption of this framework differed in the two cases, what resistances it found and what debates and issues it generated. To do so, we will first analyse the main assumptions and principles of national historical narratives, from which national identities stem. Secondly, we will apply our results to historiographical and political sources from 1880 to 1930 China and Britain, in order to determine the degree and pace of adoption of these master narratives in the two cases. Finally, we will compare how the particular geopolitical and historical circumstances of the two examples interacted with these assumptions and principles to amplify or limit the opportunities of specific national histories and discourses to arise. The results of this study evidence that there exists a particular narrative framework at work in national histories, and that historical practice was decisively influenced by its main assumptions in China and Britain between 1880 and 1930.
    [Show full text]
  • Rh Tawney: the Integrated Life and the Reform of Education in England
    R.H. TAWNEY: THE INTEGRATED LIFE AND THE REFORM OF EDUCATION IN ENGLAND 1905-1944 MARIE FRANCIS THERESA MULLIGAN B. Ed. Sec., The University of British Columbia, 1960 M.A., Simon Fraser University, 1988 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the Department of History of- the Faculty of Arts O Marie Francis Theresa Mulligan 2006 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fall 2006 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without permission of the author. APPROVAL Name: MARIE FRANCIS THERESA MULLIGAN Degree: DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Title of Dissertation: R.H. TAWNEY: THE INTEGRATED LIFE AND THE REFORM OF EDUCATION IN ENGLAND 1905-1944 Examining Committee: Chair: Dr. Alexander Dawson Assistant Professor, History Department Dr. John Stubbs, Senior Supervisor Professor, History Department Dr. Rod Day, Supervisor Professor Emeritus, History Department Dr. Ian Dyck, Supervisor Associate Professor, History Department Dr. Marie1 Grant, External Examiner Associate Professor, History Department University of Victoria Dr. Kieran Egan, SFU External Examiner Professor, Faculty of Education Date Defended/Approved: DECLARATION OF PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENCE The author, whose copyright is declared on the title page of this work, has granted to Simon Fraser University the right to lend this thesis, project or extended essay to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users.
    [Show full text]
  • A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Table of Contents More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Table of Contents More information Contents List of illustrations page x Preface xiii 1 Introduction i 2 Family, friends and college 14 3 Becoming a historian: Paris, London and Cambridge 1910-1920 55 4 Travelling east 83 5 Women, peace and medieval people no 6 The LSE, economic history and the social sciences 1921-1940 140 7 Love, marriage and careers 171 8 Eileen Power's medieval history 200 9 World history and the end of the world 222 10 Clio, a muse 246 Appendix: 'Pekin' by Eileen Power 263 Bibliography 266 Index 285 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-40278-1 - A Woman in History Eileen Power, 1889-1940 Maxine Berg Table of Contents More information Illustrations 2.1 Beryl, Eileen and Rhoda Power, aged approximately four, seven and five. Reproduced by permission of Lady Cynthia Postan page 16 2.2 Rhoda, Beryl and Eileen Power with their mother, Mabel Grindley Clegg Power (c. 1896-7). Reproduced by permission of Lady Cynthia Postan 19 2.3 EEP (Eileen Power), KmSR (Catriona Marion Stewart Robertson (later Lady Garrett)), MLG (Margery Garrett (later Spring Rice)), Puppy Jones (Margaret Jones (later Game)). Reproduced by permission of the mistress and fellows, Girton College, Cambridge 44 2.4 (Mary) Gwladys Jones D.Litt. as director of studies in history at Girton and vice-mistress. Reproduced by permission of the mistress and fellows, Girton College, Cambridge 48 3.1 Eileen Power as a young don in her rooms at Girton.
    [Show full text]
  • Clio's Lives: Biographies and Autobiographies Of
    CLIO’S LIVES BIOGRAPHIES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES OF HISTORIANS CLIO’S LIVES BIOGRAPHIES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES OF HISTORIANS EDITED BY DOUG MUNRO AND JOHN G. REID Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Title: Clio’s lives : biographies and autobiographies of historians / editors: Doug Munro ; John G. Reid. ISBN: 9781760461430 (paperback) 9781760461447 (ebook) Subjects: Historians--North America--Biography. Historians--Australia--Biography. Authorship in literature--North America--Biography. Authorship in literature--Australia--Biography. Other Creators/Contributors: Munro, Doug, editor. Reid, John G. (John Graham), 1948- editor. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. The ANU.Lives Series in Biography is an initiative of the National Centre of Biography at The Australian National University, ncb.anu.edu.au. Cover design and layout by ANU Press. Cover image adapted from Clio, the Muse of History by Artemisia Gentileschi, 1632. This edition © 2017 ANU Press This volume is affectionately dedicated to the memory of Geoffrey Bolton (1931–2015) Geoffrey Bolton was an enthusiastic participant in the project from which this volume arose, and in the workshop at which his and the other essays were initially presented. An accomplished biographer, with four book-length biographies to his credit reaching back as far as 1958, he was also one of the finest Australian historians of an exceptionally productive generation of scholars.
    [Show full text]
  • C:\Users\John Munro\Documents\Wpdocs\Bib2
    BIBLIOGRAPHY OF WESTERN TEXTILES: Medieval and Early Modern Updated: 22 May 2013 PRIMARY SOURCES: DOCUMENTS and STATISTICS Agnoletti, Anna Maria E., ed., Statuto dell'arte della lana di Firenze, 1317-1319 (Florence, 1940). Armstrong, Clement, ‘Treatise Concerninge the Staple,’ [ca. 1536] in Richard H. Tawney and Eileen Power, eds., Tudor Economic Documents (London, 1924), vol. III, pp. 96-103 (written ca. 1525-35). Bickley, Francis, ed., The Little Red Book of Bristol, 2 vols. (Bristol, 1900). Bland, A.E., Brown, B.A., and Tawney, R.H., eds., English Economic History: Select Documents (London, 1914), Sections V-VI of Part I (1000-1485), and Sections III, V of Part II (1485-1660). Boone, Marc, ‘Nieuwe teksten over de Gentse draperie: wolaanvoer, productiewijze en controlepraktijken (ca. 1456 - 1468),’ Bulletin de la commission royale d'histoire [de Belgique], 154 (1988), 1 - 61. Carus-Wilson, Eleanora M., and Coleman, Olive, England's Export Trade, 1275-1547 (Oxford, 1963). Delepierre, Octave, and Willems, M. F. eds., Collection des keuren ou statuts de tous les métiers de Bruges (Ghent, 1842). De Pauw, Napoléon, ed., Ypre jeghen Poperinghe angaende den verbonden: gedingstukken der XIVde eeuw nopens het laken (Ghent, 1899). De Sagher, Henri, et al., eds., Recueil de documents relatifs à l'histoire de l'industrie drapière en Flandre, IIe partie: le sud-ouest de la Flandre depuis l'époque bourguignonne, 3 vols. (Brussels, 1951-66). Deschamps De Pas, J., ed., ‘Textes inédits extraits des registres echevinaux sur la décadence de l’industrie drapière à Saint-Omer au XVe siècle et les efforts de l’echevinage pour y remédier,’ Mémoires de la société des antiquaires de la Morinie, 31 (1913), 53-75.
    [Show full text]