Feminist Histories and Digital Media

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Australian Women's Register
Australian Women’s Register
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B01=Mary Spongberg
B01=Paula Hamilton
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Charlotte Stopes
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Digital Archive
digital archives
digital culture
digital feminist archival research methods
Digital Gender Divide
Digital Humanities
Digital Literacies Programmes
digital media
digital sources
digitisation
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Female Biography
female lives
feminism
feminist archival research
Feminist Archives
feminist histories
feminist history
feminist scholarship
Field Day
Field Day Anthology
Freeing Women
gender history research
Hays's Subjects
Hays’s Subjects
Henry Stopes
Information Management Society
Italian Women's Movement
Italian Women’s Movement
Language_English
Lesbian Herstory Archives
literary scholarship
literary studies digitalisation
Lotta Femminista
Mariarosa Dalla Costa
Marie Stopes
National Library
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Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
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primary source digitisation
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softlaunch
WLM
Women's History Review
Women's Library
Women's Literary History
women's political activism
Women’s Library
Women’s Literary History
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367729875
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Addressing current trends in feminist historical and literary scholarship in relation to digital media, this book looks at how the field has developed since the first feminist archival research projects were initiated over twenty years ago.

The contributions to the book explore three key concerns: projects which document the history of women’s political activism; the digitising of primary document archives by women; and the impact of digitisation on historical research about women. In addition, the book sheds light on the way in which historians and literary scholars fuse digital sources with traditional forms such as books and journal articles to imagine different and ground-breaking histories of women’s experience.

With the field of feminist history and its relationship to the digital world in a dynamic position, the contributions to this volume can be read as signposts for future research in the field, posing questions for scholars and readers to explore in more detail. This book was originally published as a special issue of Women’s History Review.

Paula Hamilton is Professor of History and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Technology, Sydney, Australia, and at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. She is a cultural historian who has published widely in oral histories and memory studies, exploring the intersection between personal and public memories. Her current research explores sensory memories of working in the home as a tool for understanding intimate class and gender relations. She is the co-editor of A Cultural History of Sound Memory and the Senses (with Joy Damousi, 2017).

Mary Spongberg is Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research at Southern Cross University, Australia. She is the author of Writing Women’s History Since the Renaissance (2002), principal editor of the Companion to Women’s Historical Writing (2005) and former editor-in-chief of Australian Women’s Studies. Her latest book is Empathetic Histories: English Women Writers and the Nation’s Past 1790–1860 (2018).