This thesis investigates elite and genteel women’s production and consumption of material objects in Britain during the period 1750-1830. Each of its four chapters identifies a central process that characterised these engagements with material culture, focusing on ‘Migration,’ ‘Description,’ ‘Translation,’ and ‘Exchange’ in turn. The Introduction examines each of these with regard to the historiography of eighteenth-century material culture and its relationship with gender, social relations, domesticity, and materiality. It argues that by viewing material culture through the lenses of microhistory and the case study, we might gain a sense not only of how individual women acquired, used, and conceived of objects, but also how this re...
This thesis furthers the claim that dress was a vital tool for the expression of identity, particula...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
The impact of burgeoning consumerism and a new ‘world of goods’ has been well established in scholar...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
The material culture of domestic life has habitually been gendered as feminine. The traditional narr...
This chapter considers how women’s lives in early-modern Europe were shaped by their interactions wi...
Based on a book jointly written with Barbara Burman and to be published by Ashgate (The Artful Pocke...
This thesis attends to the appearance of needlework within early eighteenth-century British women\u2...
Art history has enriched the study of material culture as a scholarly field. This interdisciplinary ...
This thesis explores female authorship, friendship and knowledge-making within collecting practices ...
This thesis addresses needlework between 1920 and 1970 as a window into women’s broader experiences,...
This thesis examines the jewellery craft in Scotland between 1780 and 1914 with a focus on the rela...
Correspondence, travel writing, diary writing, painting, scrapbooking, curating, collecting and hous...
In this paper I want to tease out threads in the socio-economic narrative of fibre arts by using the...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
This thesis furthers the claim that dress was a vital tool for the expression of identity, particula...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
The impact of burgeoning consumerism and a new ‘world of goods’ has been well established in scholar...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
The material culture of domestic life has habitually been gendered as feminine. The traditional narr...
This chapter considers how women’s lives in early-modern Europe were shaped by their interactions wi...
Based on a book jointly written with Barbara Burman and to be published by Ashgate (The Artful Pocke...
This thesis attends to the appearance of needlework within early eighteenth-century British women\u2...
Art history has enriched the study of material culture as a scholarly field. This interdisciplinary ...
This thesis explores female authorship, friendship and knowledge-making within collecting practices ...
This thesis addresses needlework between 1920 and 1970 as a window into women’s broader experiences,...
This thesis examines the jewellery craft in Scotland between 1780 and 1914 with a focus on the rela...
Correspondence, travel writing, diary writing, painting, scrapbooking, curating, collecting and hous...
In this paper I want to tease out threads in the socio-economic narrative of fibre arts by using the...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
This thesis furthers the claim that dress was a vital tool for the expression of identity, particula...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
The impact of burgeoning consumerism and a new ‘world of goods’ has been well established in scholar...