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Based on extensive original research, this book examines the changing condition of women in the self-governing British Channel Island of Guernsey over the course of the century between the 1850s and 1950s. It is the first scholarly treatment of this subject in a Guernsey context, and it is aimed at academic audiences in the United Kingdom, Europe, North America and Australasia, as well as at a general Channel Island audience. The book covers a diverse range of topics, which include education, work, health, marriage, domestic abuse, sexual violence, prostitution, public office-holding, and the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Based on extensive original research, this book examines the changing condition of women in the self-governing British Channel Island of Guernsey over the course of the century between the 1850s and 1950s. It is the first scholarly treatment of this subject in a Guernsey context, and it is aimed at academic audiences in the United Kingdom, Europe, North America and Australasia, as well as at a general Channel Island audience. The book covers a diverse range of topics, which include education, work, health, marriage, domestic abuse, sexual violence, prostitution, public office-holding, and the suffrage. These topics are explored from several different angles: firstly, from the viewpoint of individual women, by means of detailed case-histories; secondly, from the viewpoint of the wider insular community, through an analysis of legislative and other instruments by which the lot of local women was improved; and thirdly, from the viewpoint of Britain, Europe and the western world generally, by comparing the nature and pace of change in Guernsey with that in other jurisdictions, paying particular regard to the differences in cultures and mentalités which might have inhibited or promoted such change.
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Autorenporträt
DR ROSE-MARIE CROSSAN is a Guernsey-born independent historian specialising in the island's social history. As well as a PhD in history from Leicester University, she has a degree in Modern Languages from Oxford University and a Postgraduate Diploma in Translation. Her previous publications include 'Guernsey, 1814¿1914: Migration and Modernisation' (Woodbridge, 2007); 'Poverty and Welfare in Guernsey, 1560¿2015' (Woodbridge, 2015); 'The States and Secondary Education, 1560¿1970' (Guernsey, 2016); 'A Women's History of Guernsey, 1850s-1950s' (Benderloch, 2018); and 'Criminal Justice in Guernsey, 1680-1929' (Benderloch, 2021).