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One of the first feminist journals, The Englishwoman's Review was a product of the early women's movement. Its first editor was Jessie Boucherett, who saw it as the successor to the English Woman's Journal (1858–64). [2] Subsequent editors were Caroline Ashurst Biggs, Helen Blackburn, and Antoinette Mackenzie. [3] [4]
Ivy Pinchbeck (9 April 1898 – 10 May 1982) was a British economic and social historian, specialising in the history of women.Her book of 1930, Women Workers and the Industrial Revolution, 1750 – 1850 was a pioneering effort in women's history, and highly influential in the next half-century.
The journal also included literary and cultural reviews not directly related to its central interests. [1] It was "an important publication in social and feminist history", [6] and so was chosen as one of six periodicals and newspapers to be digitised by the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research ...
This list of history journals presents representative notable academic journals pertaining to the field of history and historiography.It includes scholarly journals listed by journal databases and professional associations such as: JSTOR, Project MUSE, the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical Association, [1] Goedeken (2000), [2] or are published by national or regional ...
Women were at the centre of early Iron Age British communities, a new analysis of 2,000-year-old DNA reveals. The research, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, found that British Celtic ...
Annie Kenney (1879–1953) – leading figure in the WSPU; Jessie Kenney (1887–1985) – leading suffragette, assaulted the British prime minister and the home secretary at golf course; Nell Kenney (1876–1953) – suffragette; Jessie Keppie (1868–1951) – artist and subscriber to Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
Purvis, June (1991) A history of women’s education in England, Open University Press, Milton Keynes and Philadelphia. ISBN 0-335-09775-8. Translated into Japanese 1997 Minerva Press; Purvis, June (1989) Hard lessons: the lives and education of working-class women in nineteenth-century England, Polity Press, Cambridge. ISBN 0-7456-0663-6.
Her third, Tudor England: A History, was published by Yale University Press in 2022. [11] Beyond her monographs, Wooding has contributed journal articles and book chapters on subjects such as Erasmus' Bible translations, [12] John Jewel's Apology for the Church of England, [13] and the printing of books during the Marian Restoration. [14]