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Gender, History and politics in Britain
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Carys Howells C.howells.1@warwick.ac.uk Room H335
Office Hours: Thursdays and Fridays 10am (week 2 onwards – no office hours during reading week or holidays)
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Module Introduction Nearly 200 year time span.
Gender: ‘the state of being male or female, typically used with reference to social and cultural differences rather than biological ones’. Societal norms – their impact on relations with others and perception of world and place within it.
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Gender in the press Gender Pay Gap Widens to £11,600 among UK Managers’ (International Business Times, 2017) 'I'm a clever, beautiful Cambridge medical student...so why shouldn't I flaunt my body as a Miss England finalist?’ (Daily Mail, 2014) ‘John Lewis gender neutral clothing labels faces public backlash’. (Independent, 2017)
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Structure of Module 21 teaching weeks.
1 lecture and 1 seminar per week. Tutorials for long essays at student request.
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Seminars Please stick to your allocated seminar time, any changes must be arranged with History Office. Readings can be accessed via module web page – timetable – seminar page. Mix primary and secondary material. Structure changes from week to week. if absent.
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Reading and Sources Seminar readings for each week can be found on the respective web pages under the heading ‘key texts’. ‘Further Reading’ also provided as a starting point for assignment preparation. Electronic resources also available via web site: Bibliography of British and Irish History Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Nineteenth-century British Newspapers Census of England and Wales Women Writers Online Old Bailey Online Modern Records Centre Pathe News archive Most archives/museums have digitised collections (see V&A for e.g.)
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This week’s seminar… introduction to gender history
Key Readings: John Arnold, 'Is the rise of gender history 'hiding' women from history once again?', History in Focus, 8 (2005) Joanne Bailey, 'Is the rise of gender history 'hiding' women from history once again?', History in Focus, 8 (2005) Key questions: What is women's history? And gender history? Does the rise of 'gender history' once again marginalise the contribution of women? Why study gender history?
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