Flora's Fieldworkers

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absences
amateur
archives
art
Australia
biography
botanical history
botanist
botany
British North America
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Category=PDX
Category=PST
Catharine Parr Traill
class
collecting
colonial
culture
drawing
education
Empire
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
ethnicity
family
female agency
feminist
floras
flowers
gardens
gender
herbaria
historiography
home
horticulture
illustration
Indigenous
Lady Dalhousie
letters
masculinity
native
natural history
nature
networks
Ontario
plants
popular practices
pre-Confederation
print culture
professional
recovery
schooling
science
scientific
Settler
silences
societies
studies
teaching
trans-atlantic
Victorian
ways knowing
women

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228011125
  • Dimensions: 159 x 248mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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When Catharine Parr Traill came to Upper Canada in 1832 as a settler from England, she brought along with her ties to British botanical culture. Nonetheless, when she arrived she encountered a new natural landscape and, like other women chronicled in this book, set out to advance the botanical knowledge of the time from the Canadian field.
Flora's Fieldworkers employs biography, botanical data, herbaria specimens, archival sources, letters, institutional records, book history, and abundant artwork to reconstruct the ways in which women studied and understood plants in the nineteenth century. It features figures ranging from elite women involved in imperial botanical projects in British North America to settler-colonial women in Ontario and Australia – most of whom were scarcely visible in the historical record – who were active in "plant work" as collectors, writers, artists, craft workers, teachers, and organizers. Understood as an appropriate pastime for genteel ladies, botany offered women pathways to scientific education, financial autonomy, and self-expression.
The call for more diverse voices in the present must look to the past as well. Bringing botany to historians and historians to botany, Flora's Fieldworkers gathers compelling material about women in colonial and imperial Canada and Australia to take a new look at how we came to know what we know about plants.

Ann Shteir is professor emerita and senior scholar in gender, feminist, and women's studies at York University.