Space Place and Gendered Identities
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<p>In the last two decades, historians have increasingly sought to understand how environments, ‘built’ and otherwise, architectural surroundings, landscapes, and conceptual ‘places’ and ‘spaces’ have affected the nature and scope of political power, cultural production and social experience . The essays in this collection expand upon this already rich field of inquiry by combining an analytical approach sensitive to questions of gender with an exploration of ideas of political space. The volume demonstrates how the gendered and political meanings of space—be that space domestic or public, rural or urban, real or imagined, or a combination of all these and more—are fashioned through the movement of historical actors through space and time. Whether in delineating the gendered and politicized space of the pulpit; the sickroom; the Irish farmyard; the London suffrage atelier; the domestic space created by the wireless; the lesbian ‘scene’ of rural Canada; the eighteenth-century ladies' ‘closet’; or the public space within the ‘public history’ of historic houses, the volume demonstrates how the meanings of these spaces are not fixed, but are challenged and reformulated. </p><p>This book was originally published as a special issue of W<i>omen’s History Review.</i></p> <p>1. Introduction: Space, Place and Gendered Identities: feminist history and the spatial turn <i>Kathryne Beebe, Angela Davis and Kathryn Gleadle </i>2. Sexuality in Heterotopia: time, space and love between women in the historic house <i>Alison Oram </i>3. Making a Scene: struggles over lesbian place-making in anglophone Canada, 1964–1984 <i>Liz Millward </i>4. Place and Power in Irish Farms at the End of the Nineteenth Century <i>Katie Barclay 5</i> Making Space: English women, letter-writing, and the life of the mind, c.1650–1750 <em>Leonie Hannan</em> 6. Homes Both Sides of the Microphone: the wireless and domestic space in inter-war Britain <em>Maggie Andrews</em> 7. Changing Spaces: art, politics, and identity in the home studios of the Suffrage Atelier <i>Tara Morton </i>8. ‘Unduly conscious of her sex’: priesthood, female bodies, and sacred space in the Church of England <i>Timothy Willem Jones </i>9. ‘To console, to nurse, to prepare for eternity’: the Catholic sickroom in late nineteenth-century England <i>Carmen M. Mangion, Birkbeck</i></p>
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