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Precarious Professionals: Gender, Identities and Social Change in Modern Britain: Contents

Precarious Professionals: Gender, Identities and Social Change in Modern Britain
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Series Page
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. List of Figures
  8. Notes on Contributors
  9. Introduction
  10. 1. Anna Jameson and the Claims of Art Criticism in Nineteenth-Century England
  11. 2. Women, Science and Professional Identity, c.1860–1914
  12. 3. Brother Barristers: Masculinity and the Culture of the Victorian Bar
  13. 4. Legal Paperwork and Public Policy: Eliza Orme’s Professional Expertise in Late-Victorian Britain
  14. 5. Marriage and Metalwork: Gender and Professional Status in Edith and Nelson Dawson’s Arts and Crafts Partnership
  15. 6. ‘Giggling Adolescents’ to Refugees, Bullets and Wolves: Francesca Wilson Finds a Profession
  16. 7. Women at Work in the League of Nations Secretariat
  17. 8. Ninette de Valois and the Transformation of Early-Twentieth-Century British Ballet
  18. 9. Archives, Autobiography and the Professional Woman: The Personal Papers of Mary Agnes Hamilton
  19. 10. Women Historians in the Twentieth Century
  20. 11. Feminism, Selfhood and Social Research: Professional Women’s Organizations in 1960s Britain
  21. 12. The ‘Spotting a Homosexual Checklist’: Masculinity, Homosexuality and the British Foreign Office, 1965–70
  22. Afterword
  23. Index

Contents

Acknowledgements

List of figures

Notes on contributors

Introduction

Heidi Egginton and Zoë Thomas

 1. Anna Jameson and the claims of art criticism in nineteenth-century England

Benjamin Dabby

 2. Women, science and professional identity, c.1860–1914

Claire G. Jones

 3. Brother barristers: masculinity and the culture of the Victorian bar

Ren Pepitone

 4. Legal paperwork and public policy: Eliza Orme’s professional expertise in late-Victorian Britain

Leslie Howsam

 5. Marriage and metalwork: Gender and professional status in Edith and Nelson Dawson’s Arts and Crafts partnership

Zoë Thomas

 6. ‘Giggling adolescents’ to refugees, bullets and wolves: Francesca Wilson finds a profession

Ellen Ross

 7. Women at work in the League of Nations Secretariat

Susan Pedersen

 8. Ninette de Valois and the transformation of early twentieth-century British ballet

Laura Quinton

 9. Archives, autobiography and the professional woman: the personal papers of Mary Agnes Hamilton

Heidi Egginton

10. Women historians in the twentieth century

Laura Carter

11. Feminism, selfhood and social research: professional women’s organizations in 1960s Britain

Helen McCarthy

12. The ‘spotting a homosexual checklist’: masculinity, homosexuality and the British Foreign Office, 1965–70

James Southern

Afterword

Christina de Bellaigue

Index

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