Abstract: The late eighteenth century has often been portrayed as a pivotal period in the genesis of modern awareness and use of time. Despite this, empirical research to bolster such claims remains relatively thin. The same holds true for gender differences as surprisingly little is known about women's timekeeping and time-use in early modern Europe. Drawing on evidence from the late eighteenth-century diary of Clara Cornelia van Eijck, a Dutch burgeres who spent her days in exile in Ghent, this article provides a fresh perspective on some of the key debates on early modern awareness of time
Unruly Keepers traces the tested ethics of keeping time. Presented throughout the pages of early mod...
A time–space diary is a document in which an individual records her involvement and/or impressions o...
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have co...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
In this issue of the Journal of Early Modern Studies, we explore the different ways in which time wa...
Scholars of timekeeping have assumed that time was linear and mechanical in the nineteenth century, ...
In antebellum America, women were masters of the multiple, competing temporalities that organised t...
Original title: Met het oog op de tijd Like money, we can only spend our time once. Unlike mo...
A translated summary of Nederland in een dag (2011) How do people in the Netherlands use their ti...
The history of early modern reading has long been based on narratives of long-term change, tracing t...
Unruly Keepers traces the tested ethics of keeping time. Presented throughout the pages of early mod...
A time–space diary is a document in which an individual records her involvement and/or impressions o...
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have co...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
Is time gendered? This international, interdisciplinary anthology studies the early modern era to an...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
The article examines early modern Englishwomen’s notions and experiences of time in their daily live...
In this issue of the Journal of Early Modern Studies, we explore the different ways in which time wa...
Scholars of timekeeping have assumed that time was linear and mechanical in the nineteenth century, ...
In antebellum America, women were masters of the multiple, competing temporalities that organised t...
Original title: Met het oog op de tijd Like money, we can only spend our time once. Unlike mo...
A translated summary of Nederland in een dag (2011) How do people in the Netherlands use their ti...
The history of early modern reading has long been based on narratives of long-term change, tracing t...
Unruly Keepers traces the tested ethics of keeping time. Presented throughout the pages of early mod...
A time–space diary is a document in which an individual records her involvement and/or impressions o...
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have co...