Ellen McArthur was one of the earliest students of Girton College, Cambridge. Although excluded from full membership of Cambridge University (women were only admitted as faculty members in 1926, and as students in 1948), she went on to pioneer the new field of academic history and to teach in Cambridge for a quarter of a century, as well as at the newly formed London School of Economics in the 1890s and at Westfield College in London. McArthur campaigned tirelessly for suffrage and to admit women to Cambridge University, while teaching an entire generation of women university historians, ranging from medievalists to modernists. This article examines her intellectual and political context and influence
This article brings together six talented women historians in twentieth-century England whose schola...
The introduction of Women’s Studies programs into the academy has been one of American higher educat...
Margaret Murray, who was born 150 years ago, was one of the first archaeologists to be employed at U...
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The medieval historian Eileen Power (1889-1940) was one of Britain’s most eminent female historians ...
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Born in 1849 to upper middle-class parents, Constance Maynard was one of the first women in England ...
In 1970, at Queen's University Belfast, Claire Palley became the first woman to hold a Chair in Law ...
This article brings together six talented women historians in twentieth-century England whose schola...
The introduction of Women’s Studies programs into the academy has been one of American higher educat...
Margaret Murray, who was born 150 years ago, was one of the first archaeologists to be employed at U...
During the late nineteenth century, British women received better education, especially at the unive...
This thesis is an account of how an academic profession for women evolved in England during the peri...
Scholars of women's rhetoric, educational history, and composition studies have yet to account fully...
Although several scholars have briefly discussed CLSW in conjunction with work on other subjects, th...
Based on the author's dissertation, this article traces the development of the academic profession f...
Higher education for women in the fields of science and mathematics significantly expanded in the U...
The medieval historian Eileen Power (1889-1940) was one of Britain’s most eminent female historians ...
This article was provoked by the author’s conviction that its subject was a great deal more signific...
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, debating political questions in spaces like th...
This article explores the first British university-associated women's colleges at the turn of the ni...
Born in 1849 to upper middle-class parents, Constance Maynard was one of the first women in England ...
In 1970, at Queen's University Belfast, Claire Palley became the first woman to hold a Chair in Law ...
This article brings together six talented women historians in twentieth-century England whose schola...
The introduction of Women’s Studies programs into the academy has been one of American higher educat...
Margaret Murray, who was born 150 years ago, was one of the first archaeologists to be employed at U...