Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century
Herausgeber: Dalley, Lana
Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century
Herausgeber: Dalley, Lana
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Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century is the first comprehensive collection of women's economic writing in the long nineteenth century.
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Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century is the first comprehensive collection of women's economic writing in the long nineteenth century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 142
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9780367337254
- ISBN-10: 0367337258
- Artikelnr.: 69937194
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 142
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 11mm
- Gewicht: 399g
- ISBN-13: 9780367337254
- ISBN-10: 0367337258
- Artikelnr.: 69937194
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Lana L. Dalley is Professor of Victorian Literature, California State University, Fullerton, USA
Volume 4 General Introduction Part 6. Consumerism 1. Hannah More
'The Market Woman
a True Tale; or Honesty Is the Best Policy'
Cheap Repository Tracts (London
J. Marshall
1795). 2. Elizabeth Coltman Heyrick. Immediate
Not Gradual Abolition; or
An Inquiry into the Shortest
Safest
and Most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery (London
J. Hatchard & Son
1824)
pp. 3-7
24. 3. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna
Wrongs of Woman (New York
M.W. Dodd
1845)
pp. 9-14
45-63
86-90
93-98
106-108 4. Elizabeth Gaskell
Cranford (London: Chapman and Hall
1853)
pp. 189-203. 5. Caroline H. Dall
'The Market'
The College
The Market
and The Court; Or
Women's Relation to Education
Labor
and Law (Boston
Lee and Shepard
1867)
p. 133-150 6. Mary P. Whiteman
'Saleswomen in the Great Stores'
Cosmopolitan. Vol. 14
No. 1
May 1895
pp. 79-85. 7. Lady [Susan] Jeune
'The Ethics of Shopping'
Fortnightly Review
n.s. 57
January 1895
pp. 123-32. Part 7. Emigration and Empire 8. Mathilda Hays
'Letter to the Editor'
The Times
Tuesday
April 29
1862
pp. 14. 9. Marie Rye
'Emigration of Educated Women'
(London
Emily Faithfull/Victoria Press
1861)
pp. 3-14. 10. Jane Lewin
'Female Middle Class Emigration'
a paper read at the Social Science Congress
October 1863. 11. Jessie Boucherett
'How to Provide for Superfluous Women'
in Josephine Butler (ed.)
Woman's Work and Woman's Culture (London: Macmillan
1869)
pp. 27-47. 12. Miss Stuart
'Openings for Women in the Colonies'
Englishwoman's Review
n.s. 177
January 1888
pp. 6-9. 13. Vera Anstey
The Economic Development of India (London: Longmans
Green and Co
1929). Part 8. Self Help 14. Bessie Raynor Parkes
'What Can Educated Women Do?'
English Woman's Journal
Vol. 4
No. 22
December 1859
pp. 217-27. 15. Ella Rodman Church
Money-Making for Ladies (New York
Harper & Brothers
1882)
pp. 3-5
128-136. 16. Jessie Boucherett
'The Industrial Movement'
in Theodore Stanton (ed.)
The Woman Question in Europe (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons
1884)
pp. 90-107. 17. Dinah Mullock Craik
About Money and Other Things: A Gift Book (New York
Harper & Brothers
1887)
pp. 1-26. 18. Mrs. H. Coleman Davidson
What Our Daughters Can Do for Themselves: A Handbook of Women's Employments (London
Smith
Elder
1894)
pp. 148-151
256-262. 19. Helen Churchill Candee
'For All Workers'
How Women May Earn a Living (London
Macmillan & Co
Ltd
1900)
1-13. 20. Katharine Newbold Birdsall (ed.)
How to Make Money: Eighty Novel and Practical Suggestions for Untrained Women's Work
Based on Experience (New York: Doubleday
1903)
pp. ix-xii
91-92
120
121. Index
'The Market Woman
a True Tale; or Honesty Is the Best Policy'
Cheap Repository Tracts (London
J. Marshall
1795). 2. Elizabeth Coltman Heyrick. Immediate
Not Gradual Abolition; or
An Inquiry into the Shortest
Safest
and Most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery (London
J. Hatchard & Son
1824)
pp. 3-7
24. 3. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna
Wrongs of Woman (New York
M.W. Dodd
1845)
pp. 9-14
45-63
86-90
93-98
106-108 4. Elizabeth Gaskell
Cranford (London: Chapman and Hall
1853)
pp. 189-203. 5. Caroline H. Dall
'The Market'
The College
The Market
and The Court; Or
Women's Relation to Education
Labor
and Law (Boston
Lee and Shepard
1867)
p. 133-150 6. Mary P. Whiteman
'Saleswomen in the Great Stores'
Cosmopolitan. Vol. 14
No. 1
May 1895
pp. 79-85. 7. Lady [Susan] Jeune
'The Ethics of Shopping'
Fortnightly Review
n.s. 57
January 1895
pp. 123-32. Part 7. Emigration and Empire 8. Mathilda Hays
'Letter to the Editor'
The Times
Tuesday
April 29
1862
pp. 14. 9. Marie Rye
'Emigration of Educated Women'
(London
Emily Faithfull/Victoria Press
1861)
pp. 3-14. 10. Jane Lewin
'Female Middle Class Emigration'
a paper read at the Social Science Congress
October 1863. 11. Jessie Boucherett
'How to Provide for Superfluous Women'
in Josephine Butler (ed.)
Woman's Work and Woman's Culture (London: Macmillan
1869)
pp. 27-47. 12. Miss Stuart
'Openings for Women in the Colonies'
Englishwoman's Review
n.s. 177
January 1888
pp. 6-9. 13. Vera Anstey
The Economic Development of India (London: Longmans
Green and Co
1929). Part 8. Self Help 14. Bessie Raynor Parkes
'What Can Educated Women Do?'
English Woman's Journal
Vol. 4
No. 22
December 1859
pp. 217-27. 15. Ella Rodman Church
Money-Making for Ladies (New York
Harper & Brothers
1882)
pp. 3-5
128-136. 16. Jessie Boucherett
'The Industrial Movement'
in Theodore Stanton (ed.)
The Woman Question in Europe (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons
1884)
pp. 90-107. 17. Dinah Mullock Craik
About Money and Other Things: A Gift Book (New York
Harper & Brothers
1887)
pp. 1-26. 18. Mrs. H. Coleman Davidson
What Our Daughters Can Do for Themselves: A Handbook of Women's Employments (London
Smith
Elder
1894)
pp. 148-151
256-262. 19. Helen Churchill Candee
'For All Workers'
How Women May Earn a Living (London
Macmillan & Co
Ltd
1900)
1-13. 20. Katharine Newbold Birdsall (ed.)
How to Make Money: Eighty Novel and Practical Suggestions for Untrained Women's Work
Based on Experience (New York: Doubleday
1903)
pp. ix-xii
91-92
120
121. Index
Volume 4 General Introduction Part 6. Consumerism 1. Hannah More
'The Market Woman
a True Tale; or Honesty Is the Best Policy'
Cheap Repository Tracts (London
J. Marshall
1795). 2. Elizabeth Coltman Heyrick. Immediate
Not Gradual Abolition; or
An Inquiry into the Shortest
Safest
and Most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery (London
J. Hatchard & Son
1824)
pp. 3-7
24. 3. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna
Wrongs of Woman (New York
M.W. Dodd
1845)
pp. 9-14
45-63
86-90
93-98
106-108 4. Elizabeth Gaskell
Cranford (London: Chapman and Hall
1853)
pp. 189-203. 5. Caroline H. Dall
'The Market'
The College
The Market
and The Court; Or
Women's Relation to Education
Labor
and Law (Boston
Lee and Shepard
1867)
p. 133-150 6. Mary P. Whiteman
'Saleswomen in the Great Stores'
Cosmopolitan. Vol. 14
No. 1
May 1895
pp. 79-85. 7. Lady [Susan] Jeune
'The Ethics of Shopping'
Fortnightly Review
n.s. 57
January 1895
pp. 123-32. Part 7. Emigration and Empire 8. Mathilda Hays
'Letter to the Editor'
The Times
Tuesday
April 29
1862
pp. 14. 9. Marie Rye
'Emigration of Educated Women'
(London
Emily Faithfull/Victoria Press
1861)
pp. 3-14. 10. Jane Lewin
'Female Middle Class Emigration'
a paper read at the Social Science Congress
October 1863. 11. Jessie Boucherett
'How to Provide for Superfluous Women'
in Josephine Butler (ed.)
Woman's Work and Woman's Culture (London: Macmillan
1869)
pp. 27-47. 12. Miss Stuart
'Openings for Women in the Colonies'
Englishwoman's Review
n.s. 177
January 1888
pp. 6-9. 13. Vera Anstey
The Economic Development of India (London: Longmans
Green and Co
1929). Part 8. Self Help 14. Bessie Raynor Parkes
'What Can Educated Women Do?'
English Woman's Journal
Vol. 4
No. 22
December 1859
pp. 217-27. 15. Ella Rodman Church
Money-Making for Ladies (New York
Harper & Brothers
1882)
pp. 3-5
128-136. 16. Jessie Boucherett
'The Industrial Movement'
in Theodore Stanton (ed.)
The Woman Question in Europe (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons
1884)
pp. 90-107. 17. Dinah Mullock Craik
About Money and Other Things: A Gift Book (New York
Harper & Brothers
1887)
pp. 1-26. 18. Mrs. H. Coleman Davidson
What Our Daughters Can Do for Themselves: A Handbook of Women's Employments (London
Smith
Elder
1894)
pp. 148-151
256-262. 19. Helen Churchill Candee
'For All Workers'
How Women May Earn a Living (London
Macmillan & Co
Ltd
1900)
1-13. 20. Katharine Newbold Birdsall (ed.)
How to Make Money: Eighty Novel and Practical Suggestions for Untrained Women's Work
Based on Experience (New York: Doubleday
1903)
pp. ix-xii
91-92
120
121. Index
'The Market Woman
a True Tale; or Honesty Is the Best Policy'
Cheap Repository Tracts (London
J. Marshall
1795). 2. Elizabeth Coltman Heyrick. Immediate
Not Gradual Abolition; or
An Inquiry into the Shortest
Safest
and Most Effectual Means of Getting Rid of West Indian Slavery (London
J. Hatchard & Son
1824)
pp. 3-7
24. 3. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna
Wrongs of Woman (New York
M.W. Dodd
1845)
pp. 9-14
45-63
86-90
93-98
106-108 4. Elizabeth Gaskell
Cranford (London: Chapman and Hall
1853)
pp. 189-203. 5. Caroline H. Dall
'The Market'
The College
The Market
and The Court; Or
Women's Relation to Education
Labor
and Law (Boston
Lee and Shepard
1867)
p. 133-150 6. Mary P. Whiteman
'Saleswomen in the Great Stores'
Cosmopolitan. Vol. 14
No. 1
May 1895
pp. 79-85. 7. Lady [Susan] Jeune
'The Ethics of Shopping'
Fortnightly Review
n.s. 57
January 1895
pp. 123-32. Part 7. Emigration and Empire 8. Mathilda Hays
'Letter to the Editor'
The Times
Tuesday
April 29
1862
pp. 14. 9. Marie Rye
'Emigration of Educated Women'
(London
Emily Faithfull/Victoria Press
1861)
pp. 3-14. 10. Jane Lewin
'Female Middle Class Emigration'
a paper read at the Social Science Congress
October 1863. 11. Jessie Boucherett
'How to Provide for Superfluous Women'
in Josephine Butler (ed.)
Woman's Work and Woman's Culture (London: Macmillan
1869)
pp. 27-47. 12. Miss Stuart
'Openings for Women in the Colonies'
Englishwoman's Review
n.s. 177
January 1888
pp. 6-9. 13. Vera Anstey
The Economic Development of India (London: Longmans
Green and Co
1929). Part 8. Self Help 14. Bessie Raynor Parkes
'What Can Educated Women Do?'
English Woman's Journal
Vol. 4
No. 22
December 1859
pp. 217-27. 15. Ella Rodman Church
Money-Making for Ladies (New York
Harper & Brothers
1882)
pp. 3-5
128-136. 16. Jessie Boucherett
'The Industrial Movement'
in Theodore Stanton (ed.)
The Woman Question in Europe (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons
1884)
pp. 90-107. 17. Dinah Mullock Craik
About Money and Other Things: A Gift Book (New York
Harper & Brothers
1887)
pp. 1-26. 18. Mrs. H. Coleman Davidson
What Our Daughters Can Do for Themselves: A Handbook of Women's Employments (London
Smith
Elder
1894)
pp. 148-151
256-262. 19. Helen Churchill Candee
'For All Workers'
How Women May Earn a Living (London
Macmillan & Co
Ltd
1900)
1-13. 20. Katharine Newbold Birdsall (ed.)
How to Make Money: Eighty Novel and Practical Suggestions for Untrained Women's Work
Based on Experience (New York: Doubleday
1903)
pp. ix-xii
91-92
120
121. Index