Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century
Herausgeber: Dalley, Lana L
Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century
Herausgeber: Dalley, Lana L
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century is the first comprehensive collection of women's economic writing in the long nineteenth century.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century163,99 €
- Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century163,99 €
- Women's Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century163,99 €
- Documents on the Nineteenth Century United Kingdom Constitution163,99 €
- Documents on the Nineteenth Century United Kingdom Constitution163,99 €
- Documents on the Nineteenth Century United Kingdom Constitution163,99 €
- Documents on the Nineteenth Century United Kingdom Constitution163,99 €
-
-
-
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: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9780367336585
- ISBN-10: 0367336588
- Artikelnr.: 69938361
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9780367336585
- ISBN-10: 0367336588
- Artikelnr.: 69938361
Lana L. Dalley is Professor of Victorian Literature, California State University, Fullerton, USA
Volume 2 General Introduction Part 2. Feminist Economics 1. Harriet Martineau
'Independent Industry of Women'
Daily News
17 November 1859
p. 4. 2. Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon
'Report of the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women'
Vol. IV
No. 33
November 1860
pp. 146-151. 3. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
'Volunteer Hospital Nursing'
Paper read at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the National Association for the promotion of Social Science
Manchester
1866. 4. Matilda Joslyn Gage
'Woman as an Inventor'
The North American Review
Vol. 136
No. 318
May 1883
pp. 478-489. 5. Eleanor Marx Aveling and Edward Bibbins Aveling
'The Woman Question'
Westminster Review
Vol. 125
January 1886. pp. 207-22. 6. Clara E. Collet
'The Economic Position of Educated Working Women' (February 1890)
in Educated Working Women: Essays on the Economic Position of Women Workers in the Middle Classes (London
P.S. King & Son
1902)
pp. 1-26. 7. Anna Julia Cooper
'What Are We Worth?'
pp. 175-186. 8. Anna Julia Cooper
'Colored Women as Wage-earners'
Southern Workman and Hampton School Record
August 1899
pp. 295-98. 9. Frances M. Abbot
'The Pay of College Women'
The North American Review
Vol. 163
No. 478
Sept. 1896
pp. 337-344. 10. Margaret Bateson
'A Pound a Week - Why Girls Should Earn It'
A Girls Own Paper. October 1896
pp. 14-15. 11. Fannie Barrier Williams
'The Problem of Employment for Negro Women'
Southern Workman
Vol. 32
September
pp. 432-47. 12. Edith Abbott
'Harriet Martineau and the Employment of Women in 1836'
Journal of Political Economy
Vol. 14
No. 10
Dec. 1906
pp. 614-626. 13. Mabel Atkinson
'The Economic Foundations of the Women's Movement'
Fabian Women's Group Series
no. 4 Fabian Tract
no. 175 (London: Fabian Society
1914). Part 3. Domestic Economics 14. Mary Anne Radcliffe
'The Story of Fidelia'
in The Female Advocate
or an Attempt to Recover the Rights of Women from Male Usurpation (London
Vernor and Hood
1799)
pp. 97-127. 15. Maria Edgeworth
Castle Rackrent (London
J. Johnson
1800). 16. Lydia Marie Frances Child
The American Frugal Housewife
Dedicated to Those Who Are Not Ashamed of Economy (Boston
Marsh & Capen and Carter & Hendee
1832)
pp. 3-7. 17. Mrs. J. H. Riddell
Mortomley's Estate: A Novel (London
Hutchinson & Co
1874)
pp. 1-9. 18. Catherine Selden
'The Tyranny of the Kitchen'
The North American Review
Vol. 157
No. 443
October 1893
pp. 431-440. 19. Ada Heather-Bigg
'The Wife's Contribution to Family Income'
The Economic Journal
Vol. 4
No. 13
March 1894
pp. 51-58. 20. Marie Corelli
Flora Annie W. Steel
Lady Susan Hamilton Ardagh and Baroness Susan Mary St. Helier Jeune. The Modern Marriage Market (London
Hutchinson
1898). 21. Jane Addams
'The College Woman and the Family Claim'
Commons. Vol. 3
1898
pp. 3-7. 22. Kate Sheppard
'Economic Independence of Married Women'
(1899). 23. Helen Bosanquet
'The Economic Importance of the Family'
in The Strength of the People: A Study in Social Economics (London: Macmillan
1903)
pp. 180-192. 24. Katherine Susan Anthony
extracts from Mothers Who Must Earn (New York: Survey Associates
1914)
pp. 18-24
85-89
199-200. 25. Olive Malvery
'Women Who Work and Babes Who Weep - 'What "Home Industries" Mean'
in The Soul Market (New York
McClure
Phillips
and Company
1907)
pp. 182-201. 26. Cecily Hamilton
Marriage as a Trade (New York
Moffat
Yard and Company
1909). Index
'Independent Industry of Women'
Daily News
17 November 1859
p. 4. 2. Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon
'Report of the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women'
Vol. IV
No. 33
November 1860
pp. 146-151. 3. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
'Volunteer Hospital Nursing'
Paper read at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the National Association for the promotion of Social Science
Manchester
1866. 4. Matilda Joslyn Gage
'Woman as an Inventor'
The North American Review
Vol. 136
No. 318
May 1883
pp. 478-489. 5. Eleanor Marx Aveling and Edward Bibbins Aveling
'The Woman Question'
Westminster Review
Vol. 125
January 1886. pp. 207-22. 6. Clara E. Collet
'The Economic Position of Educated Working Women' (February 1890)
in Educated Working Women: Essays on the Economic Position of Women Workers in the Middle Classes (London
P.S. King & Son
1902)
pp. 1-26. 7. Anna Julia Cooper
'What Are We Worth?'
pp. 175-186. 8. Anna Julia Cooper
'Colored Women as Wage-earners'
Southern Workman and Hampton School Record
August 1899
pp. 295-98. 9. Frances M. Abbot
'The Pay of College Women'
The North American Review
Vol. 163
No. 478
Sept. 1896
pp. 337-344. 10. Margaret Bateson
'A Pound a Week - Why Girls Should Earn It'
A Girls Own Paper. October 1896
pp. 14-15. 11. Fannie Barrier Williams
'The Problem of Employment for Negro Women'
Southern Workman
Vol. 32
September
pp. 432-47. 12. Edith Abbott
'Harriet Martineau and the Employment of Women in 1836'
Journal of Political Economy
Vol. 14
No. 10
Dec. 1906
pp. 614-626. 13. Mabel Atkinson
'The Economic Foundations of the Women's Movement'
Fabian Women's Group Series
no. 4 Fabian Tract
no. 175 (London: Fabian Society
1914). Part 3. Domestic Economics 14. Mary Anne Radcliffe
'The Story of Fidelia'
in The Female Advocate
or an Attempt to Recover the Rights of Women from Male Usurpation (London
Vernor and Hood
1799)
pp. 97-127. 15. Maria Edgeworth
Castle Rackrent (London
J. Johnson
1800). 16. Lydia Marie Frances Child
The American Frugal Housewife
Dedicated to Those Who Are Not Ashamed of Economy (Boston
Marsh & Capen and Carter & Hendee
1832)
pp. 3-7. 17. Mrs. J. H. Riddell
Mortomley's Estate: A Novel (London
Hutchinson & Co
1874)
pp. 1-9. 18. Catherine Selden
'The Tyranny of the Kitchen'
The North American Review
Vol. 157
No. 443
October 1893
pp. 431-440. 19. Ada Heather-Bigg
'The Wife's Contribution to Family Income'
The Economic Journal
Vol. 4
No. 13
March 1894
pp. 51-58. 20. Marie Corelli
Flora Annie W. Steel
Lady Susan Hamilton Ardagh and Baroness Susan Mary St. Helier Jeune. The Modern Marriage Market (London
Hutchinson
1898). 21. Jane Addams
'The College Woman and the Family Claim'
Commons. Vol. 3
1898
pp. 3-7. 22. Kate Sheppard
'Economic Independence of Married Women'
(1899). 23. Helen Bosanquet
'The Economic Importance of the Family'
in The Strength of the People: A Study in Social Economics (London: Macmillan
1903)
pp. 180-192. 24. Katherine Susan Anthony
extracts from Mothers Who Must Earn (New York: Survey Associates
1914)
pp. 18-24
85-89
199-200. 25. Olive Malvery
'Women Who Work and Babes Who Weep - 'What "Home Industries" Mean'
in The Soul Market (New York
McClure
Phillips
and Company
1907)
pp. 182-201. 26. Cecily Hamilton
Marriage as a Trade (New York
Moffat
Yard and Company
1909). Index
Volume 2 General Introduction Part 2. Feminist Economics 1. Harriet Martineau
'Independent Industry of Women'
Daily News
17 November 1859
p. 4. 2. Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon
'Report of the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women'
Vol. IV
No. 33
November 1860
pp. 146-151. 3. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
'Volunteer Hospital Nursing'
Paper read at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the National Association for the promotion of Social Science
Manchester
1866. 4. Matilda Joslyn Gage
'Woman as an Inventor'
The North American Review
Vol. 136
No. 318
May 1883
pp. 478-489. 5. Eleanor Marx Aveling and Edward Bibbins Aveling
'The Woman Question'
Westminster Review
Vol. 125
January 1886. pp. 207-22. 6. Clara E. Collet
'The Economic Position of Educated Working Women' (February 1890)
in Educated Working Women: Essays on the Economic Position of Women Workers in the Middle Classes (London
P.S. King & Son
1902)
pp. 1-26. 7. Anna Julia Cooper
'What Are We Worth?'
pp. 175-186. 8. Anna Julia Cooper
'Colored Women as Wage-earners'
Southern Workman and Hampton School Record
August 1899
pp. 295-98. 9. Frances M. Abbot
'The Pay of College Women'
The North American Review
Vol. 163
No. 478
Sept. 1896
pp. 337-344. 10. Margaret Bateson
'A Pound a Week - Why Girls Should Earn It'
A Girls Own Paper. October 1896
pp. 14-15. 11. Fannie Barrier Williams
'The Problem of Employment for Negro Women'
Southern Workman
Vol. 32
September
pp. 432-47. 12. Edith Abbott
'Harriet Martineau and the Employment of Women in 1836'
Journal of Political Economy
Vol. 14
No. 10
Dec. 1906
pp. 614-626. 13. Mabel Atkinson
'The Economic Foundations of the Women's Movement'
Fabian Women's Group Series
no. 4 Fabian Tract
no. 175 (London: Fabian Society
1914). Part 3. Domestic Economics 14. Mary Anne Radcliffe
'The Story of Fidelia'
in The Female Advocate
or an Attempt to Recover the Rights of Women from Male Usurpation (London
Vernor and Hood
1799)
pp. 97-127. 15. Maria Edgeworth
Castle Rackrent (London
J. Johnson
1800). 16. Lydia Marie Frances Child
The American Frugal Housewife
Dedicated to Those Who Are Not Ashamed of Economy (Boston
Marsh & Capen and Carter & Hendee
1832)
pp. 3-7. 17. Mrs. J. H. Riddell
Mortomley's Estate: A Novel (London
Hutchinson & Co
1874)
pp. 1-9. 18. Catherine Selden
'The Tyranny of the Kitchen'
The North American Review
Vol. 157
No. 443
October 1893
pp. 431-440. 19. Ada Heather-Bigg
'The Wife's Contribution to Family Income'
The Economic Journal
Vol. 4
No. 13
March 1894
pp. 51-58. 20. Marie Corelli
Flora Annie W. Steel
Lady Susan Hamilton Ardagh and Baroness Susan Mary St. Helier Jeune. The Modern Marriage Market (London
Hutchinson
1898). 21. Jane Addams
'The College Woman and the Family Claim'
Commons. Vol. 3
1898
pp. 3-7. 22. Kate Sheppard
'Economic Independence of Married Women'
(1899). 23. Helen Bosanquet
'The Economic Importance of the Family'
in The Strength of the People: A Study in Social Economics (London: Macmillan
1903)
pp. 180-192. 24. Katherine Susan Anthony
extracts from Mothers Who Must Earn (New York: Survey Associates
1914)
pp. 18-24
85-89
199-200. 25. Olive Malvery
'Women Who Work and Babes Who Weep - 'What "Home Industries" Mean'
in The Soul Market (New York
McClure
Phillips
and Company
1907)
pp. 182-201. 26. Cecily Hamilton
Marriage as a Trade (New York
Moffat
Yard and Company
1909). Index
'Independent Industry of Women'
Daily News
17 November 1859
p. 4. 2. Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon
'Report of the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women'
Vol. IV
No. 33
November 1860
pp. 146-151. 3. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
'Volunteer Hospital Nursing'
Paper read at the Tenth Annual Meeting of the National Association for the promotion of Social Science
Manchester
1866. 4. Matilda Joslyn Gage
'Woman as an Inventor'
The North American Review
Vol. 136
No. 318
May 1883
pp. 478-489. 5. Eleanor Marx Aveling and Edward Bibbins Aveling
'The Woman Question'
Westminster Review
Vol. 125
January 1886. pp. 207-22. 6. Clara E. Collet
'The Economic Position of Educated Working Women' (February 1890)
in Educated Working Women: Essays on the Economic Position of Women Workers in the Middle Classes (London
P.S. King & Son
1902)
pp. 1-26. 7. Anna Julia Cooper
'What Are We Worth?'
pp. 175-186. 8. Anna Julia Cooper
'Colored Women as Wage-earners'
Southern Workman and Hampton School Record
August 1899
pp. 295-98. 9. Frances M. Abbot
'The Pay of College Women'
The North American Review
Vol. 163
No. 478
Sept. 1896
pp. 337-344. 10. Margaret Bateson
'A Pound a Week - Why Girls Should Earn It'
A Girls Own Paper. October 1896
pp. 14-15. 11. Fannie Barrier Williams
'The Problem of Employment for Negro Women'
Southern Workman
Vol. 32
September
pp. 432-47. 12. Edith Abbott
'Harriet Martineau and the Employment of Women in 1836'
Journal of Political Economy
Vol. 14
No. 10
Dec. 1906
pp. 614-626. 13. Mabel Atkinson
'The Economic Foundations of the Women's Movement'
Fabian Women's Group Series
no. 4 Fabian Tract
no. 175 (London: Fabian Society
1914). Part 3. Domestic Economics 14. Mary Anne Radcliffe
'The Story of Fidelia'
in The Female Advocate
or an Attempt to Recover the Rights of Women from Male Usurpation (London
Vernor and Hood
1799)
pp. 97-127. 15. Maria Edgeworth
Castle Rackrent (London
J. Johnson
1800). 16. Lydia Marie Frances Child
The American Frugal Housewife
Dedicated to Those Who Are Not Ashamed of Economy (Boston
Marsh & Capen and Carter & Hendee
1832)
pp. 3-7. 17. Mrs. J. H. Riddell
Mortomley's Estate: A Novel (London
Hutchinson & Co
1874)
pp. 1-9. 18. Catherine Selden
'The Tyranny of the Kitchen'
The North American Review
Vol. 157
No. 443
October 1893
pp. 431-440. 19. Ada Heather-Bigg
'The Wife's Contribution to Family Income'
The Economic Journal
Vol. 4
No. 13
March 1894
pp. 51-58. 20. Marie Corelli
Flora Annie W. Steel
Lady Susan Hamilton Ardagh and Baroness Susan Mary St. Helier Jeune. The Modern Marriage Market (London
Hutchinson
1898). 21. Jane Addams
'The College Woman and the Family Claim'
Commons. Vol. 3
1898
pp. 3-7. 22. Kate Sheppard
'Economic Independence of Married Women'
(1899). 23. Helen Bosanquet
'The Economic Importance of the Family'
in The Strength of the People: A Study in Social Economics (London: Macmillan
1903)
pp. 180-192. 24. Katherine Susan Anthony
extracts from Mothers Who Must Earn (New York: Survey Associates
1914)
pp. 18-24
85-89
199-200. 25. Olive Malvery
'Women Who Work and Babes Who Weep - 'What "Home Industries" Mean'
in The Soul Market (New York
McClure
Phillips
and Company
1907)
pp. 182-201. 26. Cecily Hamilton
Marriage as a Trade (New York
Moffat
Yard and Company
1909). Index