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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Briony McDonagh (University of Hull, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.120kg ISBN: 9780367208219ISBN 10: 0367208210 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 23 January 2019 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsBriony McDonagh's recent monograph, awarded the Joan Thirsk Memorial Prize, tracks the trials and tribulations of seventy elite female farmers in Georgian England. By illuminating wealthy women's activities in owning, managing and improving landed property, McDonagh's study provides an important corrective to a historiographical tradition in which male agrarian improvers have been depicted as authors of the rural landscape and female contributions largely effaced. Meticulously researched and closely written, this slim volume opens up new vistas by challenging analyses positing an increasingly gendered division between private and public spheres during the eighteenth century. - Elly Robson, Jesus College, University of Cambridge Briony McDonagh's recent monograph, awarded the Joan Thirsk Memorial Prize, tracks the trials and tribulations of seventy elite female farmers in Georgian England. By illuminating wealthy women's activities in owning, managing and improving landed property, McDonagh's study provides an important corrective to a historiographical tradition in which male agrarian improvers have been depicted as authors of the rural landscape and female contributions largely effaced. Meticulously researched and closely written, this slim volume opens up new vistas by challenging analyses positing an increasingly gendered division between private and public spheres during the eighteenth century. - Elly Robson, Jesus College, University of Cambridge It is a book that leaves you wanting more; many of the different elements of the book would be worthy of a full- length study in themselves, especially the brief section on women landownership in literature. This, though, is its strength. It covers new ground and provides new questions to be considered, as the author notes herself in the conclusion. As one would hope from a historical geographer, McDonagh has provided an excellent, clear map. I believe it will guide future scholarship in this area for a number of years. - Ruth Larsen, University of Derby Briony McDonagh's recent monograph, awarded the Joan Thirsk Memorial Prize, tracks the trials and tribulations of seventy elite female farmers in Georgian England. By illuminating wealthy women's activities in owning, managing and improving landed property, McDonagh's study provides an important corrective to a historiographical tradition in which male agrarian improvers have been depicted as authors of the rural landscape and female contributions largely effaced. Meticulously researched and closely written, this slim volume opens up new vistas by challenging analyses positing an increasingly gendered division between private and public spheres during the eighteenth century. - Elly Robson, Jesus College, University of Cambridge It is a book that leaves you wanting more; many of the different elements of the book would be worthy of a full- length study in themselves, especially the brief section on women landownership in literature. This, though, is its strength. It covers new ground and provides new questions to be considered, as the author notes herself in the conclusion. As one would hope from a historical geographer, McDonagh has provided an excellent, clear map. I believe it will guide future scholarship in this area for a number of years. - Ruth Larsen, University of Derby Author InformationBriony McDonagh is a historical and cultural geographer at the University of Hull, UK. She has published widely on the British rural landscape, on women’s histories and historical geographies, and on the geographies of protest, property and the commons. She is Chair of the Historical Geography Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) and co-PI of the University of Hull’s Gender, Place and Memory research cluster. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |