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Author

Rosemary Mitchell

Other affiliations: All Saints' College
Bio: Rosemary Mitchell is an academic researcher from Leeds Trinity University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intellectual history & Social history. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 12 publications receiving 104 citations. Previous affiliations of Rosemary Mitchell include All Saints' College.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The lives and works of some British women historians writing and publishing between 1820 and 1880 are discussed in this article, where the authors show how a group of women could work within, negotiate with, exploit and evade the restrictions of a predominantly patriarchal society.
Abstract: This article deals with the lives and works of some British women historians writing and publishing between 1820 and 1880. It aims to show how a group of women could work within, negotiate with, exploit and evade the restrictions of a predominantly patriarchal society. The first part of the article opens with an examination of their domestic backgrounds and educational opportunities, before considering their access to sources and their relations with scholars, writers and publishers. In this assessment of how these women came to be historians, both the drawbacks of their gender and the assistance given by male mentors are highlighted. In the second part of the article, the problems of personal identity experienced by women historians are examined; an outline of the (apparently) marginal historical fields in which they specialised follows. Their achievements as pioneers in the areas of social, cultural and art history and the challenge they presented to traditional male historical narratives are a...

27 citations

Book
14 Sep 2000
TL;DR: The History of The History of England: The evolution of a Standard Text and its Illustrations True Stories and Solid Facts: The Evolution of the English History Textbook The Picturesque Face of the Past: The 1840s Novels of William Harrison Ainsworth 'A United People': Charles Knight and the Making of a Picturesque History Of England Separate Spheres and Early Women's History John Lingard's History ofEngland: A Catholic History Thackeray, A'Beckett, and Leech: 'The Dignity of History' The Abuse of Antiquity and the
Abstract: Introduction: Picturing the English Past in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Historical Consciousness and National Identity Publishing the Past: Text and Image, Author, Illustrator and Publisher The History of The History of England: The Evolution of a Standard Text and its Illustrations True Stories and Solid Facts: The Evolution of the English History Textbook The Picturesque Face of the Past: The 1840s Novels of William Harrison Ainsworth 'A United People': Charles Knight and the Making of a Picturesque History of England Separate Spheres and Early Women's History John Lingard's History of England: A Catholic History Thackeray, A'Beckett, and Leech: 'The Dignity of History' The Abuse of Antiquity and the Uses of Myth: The Illustrated Historical Novel after 1850 Experiments with History: The Later Novels of W. H. Ainsworth and their Illustrations and the Decline of the Picturesque Historical Novel Conclusion

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A Stitch in Time: Women, Needlework, and the Making of History in Victorian Britain this article is a seminal work in the area of needlework and women's history.
Abstract: (1996). A Stitch in Time?: Women, Needlework, and the Making of History in Victorian Britain. Journal of Victorian Culture: Vol. 1, No. 2, pp. 185-202.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Grisly Grisell (1893) by a minor writer, Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823-1901), has been examined by as mentioned in this paper, who argues that Yonge here redefines the dominant national narrative by presenting an apparently "feminised" history, focused on gradual cultural development and familiar, local and domestic in emphasis.
Abstract: This article examines a little-known historical novel—Grisly Grisell (1893)—by a minor writer, Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823–1901), arguing that Yonge here redefines the dominant national narrative by presenting an apparently ‘feminised’ history—focused on gradual cultural development and familiar, local and domestic in emphasis—which at once interrogates and complements the ‘high political’ history of the court and war. Her articulation of this alternative historical perspective in her other later historical publications and within the context of the Tory Romantic historiographical tradition, a potentially patriarchal discourse which influenced and was influenced by both male and female writers, will demonstrate that the concept of a ‘feminised’ narrative remains problematic, and the engendered character of the text may rest in the response of nineteenth-century readers. The article concludes by comparing Yonge's attempt to produce a complementary, a richer and, a more comprehensive version of the national ...

17 citations

01 Jan 2000

12 citations


Cited by
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01 Jan 1984
TL;DR: The modes of fainting should be all as different as possible and may be made very diverting. as discussed by the authors The Girls' Book of Diversions (ca. 1840) from Sappho to myself, consider the fate of women.
Abstract: I am like the needy knife-grinder — I have no story to tell. — Maria Edgeworth I dwell in Possibility — A fairer House than Prose — More numerous of Windows — Superior — for Doors — Emily Dickinson ... the modes of fainting should be all as different as possible and may be made very diverting. — The Girls’ Book of Diversions (ca. (1840) From Sappho to myself, consider the fate of women. How unwomanly to discuss it! — Carolyn Kizer

446 citations

Dissertation
01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the influence of the mother of a king in the life of a queen and compare it to the mother-of-a-king in the case of Joan of Kent.
Abstract: Recent scholarship on medieval queenship has focussed to a great extent on 'exceptional' queens such as Isabella of France and Margaret of Anjou. This study bridges the gap between those queens by focussing on the inconspicuous queens Philippa of Hainaut and Anne of Bohemia, with comparison to Joan of Kent, not a queen but the mother of Richard II. Comparison of queens with the mother of a king allows for examination of the queenly offices, such as the uses of influence with the king. This thesis focusses on the areas of intercession and patronage in particular in order to investigate queenly use of ‘soft power’ and influence. The first chapter analyses literary depictions of intercession with its focus on motherhood, while the next chapter compares the petitionary activity of queens, finding that despite the emphasis of literary instances on pregnancy and childbirth, Philippa in particular actually participated in less intercessory activity during those times. The third chapter focusses on the queen's revenues, particularly the custom of queen's gold, which maintained an indirect link between intercession and the queen's benefits, by which she could fund her patronage activities. The next chapters focus on material culture, such as jewellery, and queenly representations including seals, effigies and depictions in manuscripts. The use of symbols and heraldry, as well as gift-giving, demonstrates that although queens were expected to assimilate into their new marital families, in practice they maintained links and identities with their birth families. Finally, the thesis examines queenly literary patronage in the late fourteenth century and the lasting legacies of Philippa, Anne and Joan.

95 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: An increased demand for orthopaedic services, an ageing population who is living longer, a decreasing workforce and obesity have added to the health care burden around the world.
Abstract: To continue to provide expert and timely care, orthopaedic surgeons need to improve the evidence base and change the shape and size of the workforce, according to a presenter at the 15th EFORT Congress – a combined programme in partnership with the BOA. “The wind of change is here and we must change, I believe. If we don’t take the leadership and change, others such as politicians and mangers will. They will do it in a way that is unacceptable and unpalatable to us and actually I do not believe it will benefi t our patients,” said Timothy Briggs, MBBS(Hons), MChOrth, FRCS(Ed), FRCS(Eng), at a 5 June symposium on international health care. He said an increased demand for orthopaedic services, an ageing population who is living longer, a decreasing workforce and obesity have added to the health care burden around the world. In 1950, there were 856 million people older than age 60 years in the world. By 2050, there will be more than 2 billion people older than 60 years. The annual budget in the United Kingdom for musculoskeletal disease is £10 billion, he said. Overall, 25% of surgical interventions in the secondary care sector are for musculoskeletal disease. “We are big players in the game because we are 33% of the surgical workforce,” Briggs said. The world debt is $52 trillion as of midMarch 2014 and while GDP spending varies around the world, governments will prioritise spending. In the United Kingdom, he said 70 of 250 hospitals were in fi nancial defi cit at the end of the last fi nancial year. Despite an increase of 1.91%, they actually needed an increase of 4.6% to stay neutral. He said the NHS will be underfunded by billions in 4 years and orthopaedic surgeons will have to get used to tariff defl ation. Additionally, if orthopaedic surgeons don’t address the challenge, general practitioners will continue to be under pressure not to refer patients for orthopaedic care. “We can no longer hold our head in the sand.” he said. Increased demand gives orthopaedic surgeons a ‘golden opportunity’ to lead and 'take control'

70 citations