Thanks for typing : remembering forgotten women in history

著者

    • Dresvina, Juliana

書誌事項

Thanks for typing : remembering forgotten women in history

edited by Juliana Dresvina

Bloomsbury Academic, 2021

  • : pb

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 1

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This collection uncovers the wives, daughters, mothers, companions and female assistants who laboured in the shadows of famous men. Revealing the reality of uncredited female contributions throughout history, this book highlights the work of neglected and forgotten women associated with celebrated male writers, scholars, activists and politicians. As the #ThanksforTyping movement has shown, anonymous women working to support the work of their male relations and colleagues has been, and often still is, a universal phenomenon. These essays show just how long intelligent and determined women have been sidelined, ignored or forgotten throughout history. From a well-connected Roman matrician to the mother of the poet Philip Larkin, these women have their voices returned to them in twenty engaging chapters. Spanning ancient times to the modern day, they return agency to women who occupied crucial roles behind the scenes, but were always restricted to the supporting role they were obliged to play. The universal importance of these women take on new meaning in our modern era where women’s voices are becoming ever-louder and increasingly recognised - including through such a movement as #ThanksforTyping.

目次

Notes on Contributors List of Figures Introduction 1. Part I: Secretaries and Editors 2. M.E. Fitzgerald: Office Manager to Modernism, Catherine Hollis, U.C. Berkeley, USA 3. The Secretary and Her Professor: Alli Hytti and L. A. Puntila, Anu Lahtinen, University of Helsinki, Finland 4. Jumped-up Typists: Two Guardians of the Flame, Karen Christensen, Independent scholar 5. Thanks for Penguin: Women, Invisible Labour, and Publishing in the Mid-Twentieth Century, Rebecca E. Lyons, University of Bristol, UK Part II: Politicians and Activists 6. Backing the Family: Servilia Between the Murder of Caesar and the Battle of Philippi, Susan Treggiari, Stanford University, USA 7. A Flaming Soul: Maissi Erkko Fighting for Women, Finland and Family Legacy, Reetta Hanninen, University of Helsinki, Finland 8. Student, Diplomat, Wife, traveller ? A Transnational Life of Marie Sargant-Cerný, Hana Navratilova, Independent scholar 9. Breaking the Silence and Inspiring Activism on Japanese Military Sexual Slavery: Legacy of Kim Hak-soon (1924-1997), Woohee Kim, Harvard University, USA Part III: Artists and Painters 10. Jeanne de Montbaston: An Illuminating Woman, Melek Karatas, King's College London, UK 11. Judith Leyster: The Artist Vanishes, Irene Kukota, Curator, France 12. Textiles Rubbing Us the Wrong Way: A Tour of Karin Bergöö Larsson’s Acts of Fibre Resistance, Godelinde Gertrude Perk, University of Oxford, UK 13. Canvases in the Attic: Four Generations of the Lane Poole women, Juliana Dresvina, University of Oxford, UK Part IV: Mothers and Others 14. Haunting Augustine: St Monnica as Mother and Interlocutor, Patricia L. Grosse, Finlandia University, USA 15. “The Typist Home at Teatime”: Vivienne Haigh-Wood Eliot’s Role in Shaping T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922), Arwa F. Al-Mubaddel, King Saud University, Riyadh 16. Edith Tolkien in the Eye of the Beholder, Maria Artamonova, Oxford University, UK 17. “Why Aren’t There More Women in Your Books?” Ann and William Golding, Nicola Presley, Bath Spa University, UK 18. “You’ll Say that Mum is at the Bottom of All This”: the Untold Story of Eva Larkin, Philip Pullen, Writer Part V: Poets and Writers 19. “Murder, He Wrote”: Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, Julia Bolton Holloway, Independent Scholar 20. Golden Myfanwy: The Domestic Goddess Who Turned the Screw, Eleanor Knight, Writer 21. Double Act: U.A. Fanthorpe and R.V. Bailey, Partners in Rhyme, Elizabeth Sandie, University of York St John, UK Epilogue Bibliography Index

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