In 1983, Australian feminist author Dale Spender interviewed Rebecca West, ninetyone, author and intrepid suffragist, and was taken aback by her hurricaneforce intellect and scimitar wit. West's writings of the past seventy years were, ...
The book argues that these ideological battles translated into competing "poetics of revolution." (Series: Kulturgeschichtliche Perspektiven - Vol. 10)
Writing the Revolution challenges the thesis that exclusion defined women's experiences of the French Revolution by exploring the life of a middle-class wife and mother of revolutionary elites, Rosalie Jullien.
“The Axe of the Event: In and Out of the Echo Chamber of West Germany's 1968.” The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture 7, no. 2 (2014): 178–83. ———. Foreign Front: Third World Politics in Sixties West Germany.
A portrayal of Rosalie's early married life, and the decade she spent with her husband and children in a small town north of Grenoble, begins the book, and is followed by a chapter on the couple's reading practices and their views toward ...
But as Heather Ford demonstrates in Writing the Revolution, the facts that appear on Wikipedia are often the result of protracted power struggles over how data are created and used, how history is written and by whom, and the very ...
'Writing the Revolution' challenges the thesis that exclusion defined women's experiences of the French Revolution by exploring the life of a middle-class wife and mother of revolutionary elites, Rosalie Jullien.
But as Heather Ford demonstrates in Writing the Revolution, the facts that appear on Wikipedia are often the result of protracted power struggles over how data are created and used, how history is written and by whom, and the very ...
The book demonstrates that the representation of 1968 as a "foundational myth" suits the needs of a number of surprisingly heterogeneous groups, and that even attempts to deconstruct the myth strengthen it.