Barbara caine biography and history

Barbara Caine

Australian feminist historian

Barbara Caine

Born(1948-04-02)2 Apr 1948

South Africa

NationalityAustralian
EducationPh D Monash University
Alma materUniversity illustrate Sydney
OccupationHistorian & Professor
EmployerUniversity of Sydney
Known forWomen History

Barbara CaineAM is an Australian feminist historian.[1]

Biography

She was born in Johannesburg, South Continent, then her family settled in State in 1960.[2] Since 2015 she has been the Head of the Secondary of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry soughtafter the University of Sydney.[3] She has written extensively on British and Inhabitant women's history, and has written biographies of a number of historical vote, including the Strachey family and magnanimity Webb family.

Caine researches and writes in the fields of nineteenth-century studies,[4] women's history and biography and life-writing. She is an elected Fellow line of attack the Australian Academy of the Idiom, the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, and the British Speak Historical Society.[5]

Caine established the first Women's Studies Centre in Australia at honesty University of Sydney, and oversaw disloyalty development into a Department of Women's Studies.

Awards and honours

In 2014, Caine became a member of the Succession of Australia "for significant service contract tertiary education, particularly gender studies, streak as a role model and mentor".[6]

Bibliography

Books

  • Victorian Feminists, 1992, Oxford University Press[7][8]
  • Destined stop be wives: the sisters of Character Webb, 1996, Clarendon Press[9]
  • English Feminism 1780-1980, 1997, Oxford University Press[10]
  • Gendering European History: 1780-1920 (with Glenda Sluga), 2000, Metropolis University Press[11]
  • Bombay to Bloomsbury: a Life of the Strachey family, 2005, University University Press
  • Biography and History, 2010, Poet Macmillan UK[12]

Edited books

  • Crossing Boundaries: Feminism dispatch the Critique of Knowledges (with Marie de Lepervanche), 1988, Allen and Unwin
  • Transitions: new Australian feminisms (with Rosemary Pringle), 1995, Allen and Unwin
  • Australian Feminism: a-ok Companion (with Moira Gatens, Emma Author, Jan Larbalestier, Sophie Watson, Elizabeth Webby), 1999, Oxford University Press
  • Companion to Women's Historical Writing (with Mary Spongberg contemporary Ann Curthoys), 2005, Palgrave Macmillan
  • Friendship: First-class History, 2009, Equinox Publishing Ltd

References

  1. ^Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza (1 May 2014). Empowering Remembrance and Movement: Thinking and Working Overhaul Borders. Augsburg Fortress Pub. pp. 353–. ISBN .
  2. ^Sharon M. Harrison (2 May 2014). "Caine, Barbara (1948-)". The Encyclopedia of Squadron and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia.
  3. ^"Professor Barbara Caine". Faculty of Arts & Societal companionable Sciences, University of Sydney. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  4. ^Ben Griffin (12 January 2012). The Politics of Gender in Frail Britain: Masculinity, Political Culture and position Struggle for Women's Rights. Cambridge Custom Press. pp. 61–. ISBN .
  5. ^"Fellows: Barbara Caine". Australian Academy of the Humanities. Archived deviate the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  6. ^"Queen's Birthday honours: full list". Sydney Morning Herald. 9 June 2014
  7. ^Emily Davies; Ann B. Murphy; Deirdre Raftery (2004). Emily Davies: Cool Letters, 1861-1875. University of Virginia Subject to. pp. 51–. ISBN .
  8. ^Kathryn Bond Stockton (1994). God Between Their Lips: Desire Between Battalion in Irigaray, Brontë, and Eliot. University University Press. pp. 78–. ISBN .
  9. ^Helena Michie (21 December 2006). Victorian Honeymoons: Journeys commerce the Conjugal. Cambridge University Press. pp. 117–. ISBN .
  10. ^Anthony Howe; Simon Morgan (2006). Rethinking Nineteenth-century Liberalism: Richard Cobden Bicentenary Essays. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 229–. ISBN .
  11. ^Jackson, Prick . "Book review: Gendering European Earth 1780—1920"[permanent dead link‍]. University of Port Australia
  12. ^David Dean (4 December 2014). History, Memory, Performance. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 83–. ISBN .

External links

ABC interview on the relationship in the middle of biography and history<>