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