23 results on '"Gender History"'
Search Results
2. Imagination and History: Glamour and Geology
- Author
-
Driggers, E. Allen and Driggers, E. Allen
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Words at Work, Words on the Move: Textual Production of Migrant Women from Early Modern Prague Between Discourses and Practices (1570–1620)
- Author
-
Čapská, Veronika, Deng, Kent, Series Editor, and Zucca Micheletto, Beatrice, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Hierarchy, Solidarity and Conflict: Dartmoor’s Hybrid Regime
- Author
-
Davie, Neil and Davie, Neil
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Introduction
- Author
-
Aali, Heta, Beem, Charles E., Series Editor, Levin, Carole, Series Editor, and Aali, Heta
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Conclusions
- Author
-
Summers, Anne, Feldman, David, Series editor, and Summers, Anne
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Introduction
- Author
-
Cristellon, Cecilia, Houston, Rab, Series editor, Muir, Edward, Series editor, and Cristellon, Cecilia
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hierarchy, Solidarity and Conflict: Dartmoor’s Hybrid Regime
- Author
-
Neil Davie
- Subjects
Race (biology) ,Hierarchy ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Agency (philosophy) ,Narrative ,Prison ,Criminology ,Gender history ,Solidarity ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
This chapter focuses on the nature of the relationships on the ground between captives and captors at Dartmoor, and draws on prisoner narratives and official sources to build up a detailed picture of the shifting hierarchies, solidarities and conflicts that characterised daily life at the prison. Particular attention is paid to a set of rituals designed to transform inmates from free combatants into prisoners of war, including registration, roll-call and prison dress. Other subjects studied in this chapter include the central issue of the food ration, the role of the elected prisoner committees, the place of two vilified groups living on the margins of prisoner society and the ramifications of the presence of up to 1000 sailors of colour at the prison during the period 1813–1815.
- Published
- 2021
9. Gender and Psychological Differences: Gender and Subjectivity
- Author
-
María Dolores Avia and Mª Luisa Sánchez-Bernardos
- Subjects
Subjectivity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Interpersonal communication ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Unit of analysis ,Developmental psychology ,Heredity ,medicine ,Trait ,Personality ,Gender history ,Psychology ,Borderline personality disorder ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Different units of analysis to study gender differences in psychological domains have been proposed. Basically, the present chapter is focused on the trait domain, characteristic adaptations, the objective biography, self-schemas, and character strengths. The main results point to some differences between men and women at the trait level, but the magnitude of this difference is generally small. Although the basic tendencies that represent traits are strongly dictated by heredity, some cultural and environmental influences have been signaled. Vital pathways, different patterns for managing work and the private life, interpersonal ways of treating others, etc., are among the different adaptations that men and women have to accomplish. At this level more gender differences have been found, although they are not stable because of cultural and historical changes. Research has found male/female differences in the structure of the self-schema, and some data on a few of the many character strengths also have appeared. According to all this, it is argued that differences can also be found in the objective biography of men and women. The conclusion, however, is that we should not emphasize peculiarities, since in the five domains of personality the differences are generally not large.
- Published
- 2019
10. Afterword: Irish Masculinities and Gender History
- Author
-
Sonya O. Rose
- Subjects
Politics ,Irish ,Gender relations ,language ,Gender studies ,Mythology ,Sociology ,Gender history ,language.human_language - Abstract
This final afterword begins by debunking the myth that Irish gendered history refers only to women’s history. Men in gender history, as developed in the United States and Britain, are not universal beings, but are instead part of a fluid and ever-changing system of gender relations. Rose argues that gender is a framework of ideas and practices that socially differentiate male and female as well as constituting important differences among men and women and their influence on political, social, economic and cultural processes as well as the routines and transformations of daily life. The essays in this collection advance the notion that gender matters in Irishmen’s lives and that an interdisciplinary approach is essential for cultural analyses of gender studies in Ireland.
- Published
- 2019
11. Ireland and Masculinities in History: An Introduction
- Author
-
Rebecca Anne Barr, Sean Brady, and Jane G.V. McGaughey
- Subjects
History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,Historiography ,Conservatism ,language.human_language ,Irish ,Masculinity ,Film studies ,language ,Gender history ,media_common - Abstract
The introduction to this collection outlines previous scholarly work on Ireland, history, and masculinities. It gives an overview of the essays contained in the volume, contextualising their approaches within the broader field. While research on masculinities generally tends to vary depending on geographical focus, the dearth of historical work on Irish masculinities—and of genders and sexualities in general—is notable, especially when compared with the development of these areas in the historiography of the United States and Britain. This chapter suggests that the paucity of historical analyses of masculinity, when compared with other fields such as literature, cultural and film studies, is indicative not only of methodological conservatism in Irish historiography but also of a tendency to equate gender history with women’s history.
- Published
- 2019
12. Introduction: Making Love Sexual in the Edwardian Age
- Author
-
Michael Gauvreau and Nancy Christie
- Subjects
Faith ,Courtship ,Scholarship ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Introspection ,Human sexuality ,Historiography ,Gender studies ,Context (language use) ,Sociology ,Gender history ,media_common - Abstract
This chapter introduces the reader to the extraordinary correspondence of our couple, Harry Logan and Gwyneth Murray, and places their discussions of the interrelationship between sex, love and marriage in the context of British culture in the Edwardian period. Further, we discuss the historical scholarship pertaining to gender history, the history of modernities, and the history of sexuality, indicating how first-person accounts of courtship and marriage revise this established historiography. It suggests ways as to how ordinary middle-class people who kept their faith nevertheless negotiated the transition from Victorian to modern, which included a greater value placed on sexual freedom, personal relationships, psychological introspection, and greater emotional expressiveness.
- Published
- 2018
13. Does One Need to Be a Man to Be a Great Man?
- Author
-
Nathalie Prince
- Subjects
Power (social and political) ,History ,Great Man theory ,Biography ,Gender history ,Religious studies ,Making-of - Abstract
Drawing on The Prince (Machiavelli in Le Prince (Il Principe ou De Principatibus, 1532). Œuvres completes, Gallimard, Paris, 1952), this essay ponders the relationship between history and biography and underlines that the power of “great men” tends to gender history as female. Biopics, in particular, submit history to certain individuals and raise some individuals to historical status. Does the making of “great men” undermine grand history?
- Published
- 2018
14. On the Gender of Books: Author Gender Mixing in Book Communities
- Author
-
Bucur, Doina, Cherifi, Chantal, Cherifi, Hocine, Karsai, Márton, and Musolesi, Mirco
- Subjects
History ,Assortativity ,Gender studies ,Gender history ,Preferential attachment ,Mixing (physics) - Abstract
Using a book co-buying network from amazon.com of over 1 million books, we find empirically that readers who have purchased male first authors before are substantially less likely than expected to buy books by female first authors, when aggregated across the entire book market. Conversely, past buyers of female authors are slightly more likely than expected to buy other female authors. This same-gender assortativity is found to be local: certain writing genres are ``coloured'' preferentially by one gender. This can be attributed both to writer availability (i.e., a gender's preferential attachment to writing for one genre), and to the buyers' preferential attachment to the output of writers of one gender. We obtain these insights by classifying the gender of the first author for most of the books, then running statistical tests which compare the gender makeup of books co-bought with either male or female books. Structural book communities, as generated from readers' co-buying choices, are computed, visualised in terms of gender makeup, and their writing genres are summarised to match the genre with a gender makeup.
- Published
- 2017
15. Women’s History and Governance
- Author
-
Pelizzari, Maria Rosaria
- Subjects
Gender equality ,Gender history ,Women and power ,Female leadership ,Women’s rights history - Published
- 2017
16. Introduction to Gender and Religion
- Author
-
David P. Gushee
- Subjects
Group conflict ,Peacemaking ,Social exclusion ,Gender studies ,Conflict transformation ,Sociology ,Gender history - Abstract
The three chapters in Part II on gender and religion are linked in that each offers an alternative or out-of-the-mainstream approach to conflict transformation, though each takes a very different approach. Carolina Rehrmann’s chapter focuses on gender. She explores the disproportionate role women play in initiating transformation and reconciliation efforts after horrific violence and war. The chapters by Richard Friedli and David P. Gushee focus on religion. Friedli addresses the religious dimensions in intergroup conflict and explores religious resources for reconciliation. Gushee’s chapter explores the ethical contribution of the late Christian ethicist Glen Stassen’s ‘just peacemaking’ theory, which distils ten peacemaking practices. Together the three chapters offer diverse alternative approaches to conflict transformation, drawing from different disciplines, contexts, and historical eras.
- Published
- 2017
17. White Male History: The Genre and Gender of The Proposition
- Author
-
Stephen Gaunson
- Subjects
Literature ,Allegory ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Representation (arts) ,Art ,Colonialism ,Film genre ,Scholarship ,Verisimilitude ,Depiction ,Gender history ,business ,media_common - Abstract
John Hillcoat’s The Proposition (2005) is a critically acclaimed movie that has been widely lauded for its brutal and violent depictions of Australia’s colonial history. In film scholarship, questions regarding the film’s genre, representation and its treatment of colonial history are far from settled. A key issue is that The Proposition avoids historical verisimilitude in favour of baroque allegory. Because the film invents a fictional history, some scholars have reconsidered the text in terms of film genre. Yet, as this chapter argues, the film’s attempt to develop a subversive depiction of colonial Australian violence is limited by the film’s formulaic approach to genre and an orthodox representation of settler Australia.
- Published
- 2017
18. 'Real Men Wear Pink'? A Gender History of Color
- Author
-
Dominique Grisard
- Subjects
Power (social and political) ,Metonymy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Subject (philosophy) ,Gender studies ,Girl ,Art ,Gender history ,Femininity ,media_common ,History of art - Abstract
The first thing that happens to a newborn baby is that it is color-coded—pink if a girl, blue if a boy. For girls, in particular, this is just the beginning of an extensive color-coded gendering process. Since the early 2000s, girl advocates have openly criticized pink’s seductive pull on little girls. More recently, boys who wear pink have become subject to discussion. Tracing the metonymic relationship between color and femininity in the Western history of art, fashion, and marketing helps contextualize current anxieties about pink’s alleged power to feminize boys. It shows that the global circulation of color theories and actual paints and dyes since the sixteenth century, on one hand, and the “color revolution” in marketing and fashion of the early-to-mid twentieth century, on the other hand, paved the way for today’s gendered “affective economy” of pink.
- Published
- 2017
19. Family and Gender: Religion and Work
- Author
-
Sue Ledwith and Gaye Yilmaz
- Subjects
Promotion (rank) ,Work (electrical) ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Marital status ,Gender studies ,Narrative ,Care work ,Sociology ,Gender history ,media_common ,Gender psychology - Abstract
In this chapter we enter into dual lives of migrant women both at home and as paid workers in domestic and care work. We try to discover how much marital status and religious belief, patriarchal and religious cultural codes shaped the identities of women in marriage, in the family and home, when doing housework, in prioritising male promotion and job prospects. We also discuss whether such codes spill over to the unmarried and the atheists. The chapter also exposes the perceptions of women of ‘male superiority’ via their narratives of their gendered roles in these dual lives.
- Published
- 2017
20. Teaching Work and Gender in the Twenty-First Century
- Author
-
Erin Anderson
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Intersectionality ,Empirical research ,Political science ,Compensation (psychology) ,Pedagogy ,Ethnic group ,Gender studies ,Gender history ,Social class ,Social policy - Abstract
Today’s undergraduate students seldom question women’s presence or roles in the workplace. Because they have come to see women’s employment as common place, they are often less aware of the persistent gender inequalities in the workplace or the historical roots of these patterns. Throughout my course on Work and Gender I challenge students to think critically about what constitutes “work” and the disparity in the social and economic value of paid and unpaid labor, how race, ethnicity, and social class have influenced gender roles and rewards over time, and how social policy, gendered organizations, and family roles impact the opportunities, experiences, and compensation workers can expect as a result of their gender. These objectives are accomplished through the reading and discussion of empirical research, personal reflections, guest speakers, and documentary film. My goals in teaching this course are for students to come away with a greater awareness of the intersection of race, class, and gender in work and family roles as well as perspective to draw on in their own personal and professional paths.
- Published
- 2016
21. Marpingen: A Remote Village and Its Virgin in a Transnational Context
- Author
-
Olaf Blaschke
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Media studies ,Context (language use) ,Character (symbol) ,language.human_language ,German ,Politics ,Geography ,State (polity) ,Environmental protection ,language ,Sacred Heart ,Gender history ,media_common - Abstract
Olaf Blaschke analyzes the transnational dimension of the Marian apparitions at Marpingen in 1876. He draws the attention on how transnational perspectives help to understand the character of the apparitions and the reactions of both the villagers and its opponents: the liberals and the state. As long as all relevant perspectives are considered adequately (among them local, political, national and social aspects, religious conflicts and gender history), the transnational factors—already carved out by David Blackbourn’s eminent classic about Marpingen—give a necessary explanation but not ample explanations for the phenomena. Blaschke concludes by showing how from the very beginning till the end, the “German Lourdes” had a transnational projection.
- Published
- 2016
22. Female-to-Male (FtM) Transgender Employees in Australia
- Author
-
Tiffany Jones
- Subjects
030505 public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Gender studies ,Genderqueer ,Transsexual ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Transgender ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Apprenticeship ,Gender history ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Reference group ,Transphobia ,media_common - Abstract
Recent years have seen greater recognition of the right to non-discrimination in employment on the basis of gender identity in both international human rights law, and Australian national and state laws. However, there is a lack of employment-focused research on transgender people broadly, and Female to Male (FtM) transgender people particularly—existing studies typically focus on clinical concerns for MtF populations. This chapter reports on a 2013 national online study of 273 FtM transgender Australians, which combined an anonymous online survey gathering basic data with a communal discussion-board allowing participants to offer deeper discussions (using a pseudonym of their choice). The project was developed with a reference group and key gender centres and online support networks assisted in recruitment. Participants ranged in age from 16 to 64 and mostly identified simply as male, but other identities (transsexual male, genderqueer and so on) were represented. The majority were working (full-time, part-time or in an apprenticeship) on a broad range of incomes. However, the research revealed a higher portion of unemployment than in previous Australian studies. The qualitative data revealed clear obstacles to employment and promotion for FtM people; the fear of coming out as transgender, transphobia in the workspace and in recruitment, the desire to avoid work during transition, uncertainty around the need to reveal gender history in a job or police check applications, and fear of exposure in certain environments. Leadership had a pivotal role in whether workplaces were transphobic or supportive and best-practice leadership are outlined. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the urgent need for workplace equity training measures and related research.
- Published
- 2016
23. The Gender Matters
- Author
-
Alison Welch, Alfredo Gutierrez, and M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Suicide attempt ,Suicidal behavior ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Sexual orientation ,Gender history ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
While there is converging evidence suggesting gender differences in the rates of suicidal behaviors, substantially less is known about the mechanisms underlying these differences. What follows is a review of the evidence supporting gender differences in suicidal behaviors, including epidemiology, age trends, methods, risk and protective factors, treatment, and the effects of sexual orientation and culture.
- Published
- 2016
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.