Pedersen, Susan. Family, Dependence, and the Origins of the Welfare State: Britain and France, 1914-1945. Cambridge University Press, 1993.
144
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Anthologization | Eleanor Rathbone | ER
contributed an essay to the Economic Journal which was reprinted in September as The Remuneration of Women's Services in The Making of Women: Oxford
Essays in Feminism. Pedersen, Susan. Family, Dependence, and the Origins of the Welfare State: Britain and France, 1914-1945. Cambridge University Press, 1993. 144 Pedersen, Susan. Eleanor Rathbone and the Politics of Conscience. Yale University Press, 2004. 379 |
Birth | May Cannan | She thus records her entry into the all-male institution of Oxford University
in the nineteenth century. She goes on: There was already an elder sister and it had been a son that had been hoped... |
Characters | Winifred Peck | It is her mother, Ione decides, who is the rock of this house, while her father is the sands—a splendid stretch with good safe bathing, but sand all the same! Peck, Winifred. Veiled Destinies. Faber and Faber, 1948. 189 |
Characters | Penelope Mortimer | Again the subject is an unhappy marriage, in which the wife is plaintive and neurotic and the dislikeable husband is (as a change from the law) a dentist. Lord, Graham. John Mortimer, The Devil’s Advocate. The Unauthorised Biography. Orion, 2005. 81 |
Characters | Elizabeth Boyd | A first prologue addresses Pope
, and invokes the ghosts of Shakespeare
(The Wonder, as the Glory of the Land) and Dryden
(Shakespear's Freind) as mentors to EB
's performance in... |
Characters | Jennifer Dawson | This, building like so many of her works on her own experiences, reverts to her unhappy time as a student at Oxford
. The protagonist is Claire, a college secretary who reflects back in the... |
Characters | Evelyn Waugh | Its young male protagonist, recently an Oxford
undergraduate, is enabled by his stupid attempt at suicide to achieve a brief, exalted feeling of being poised between life and death. The technique is experimental, drawing on... |
Characters | Mary Augusta Ward | Isabel Bretherton is a beautiful but untaught actress from the colonies (born of a Scots father and Italian mother). She falls in love with an Oxford
scholar, Eustace Kendal. but is deeply wounded by his... |
Characters | Ethel Mannin | Starridge is a recent Oxford
graduate whom his family and acquaintance find distinctly odd. He is unable to relate to others and prefers working as a freelance poet to employment in his father's accountancy firm... |
Characters | Evelyn Sharp | The protagonist of the opening story has covered herself with glory as a student of Greek at Oxfprd
, but she still has no means of earning a living except work as a governess. In... |
Characters | Mary Augusta Ward | The book is a tribute to the OxfordMAW
so loved. The book traces the arrival of an orphaned heiress at the home of her uncle, a married and financially struggling Reader in classics at... |
Characters | Ella Hepworth Dixon | Peggy describes her ephemeral admirers with piercing humour and biting sarcasm: for example, Gilbert Mandell, who at thirty-four is twice her age. The son of a deodorant manufacturer, Gilbert deals with his father's publicity by... |
Characters | Mary Augusta Ward | The novel focuses on the war effort at home. A country squire and antiquarian is converted from resistance to enthusiasm for the cause through the traumatic death of his son and, above all, the influence... |
Characters | Lettice Cooper | The story is set in a town called Aire, which has been variously identified as Leeds and Sheffield. It depicts the socialist movement at a moment of transition: the rich industrialist Marsdens, the old-money... |
Characters | Barbara Pym | The central characters here are Jane Cleveland, a kindly and somewhat fey Oxford
don, and Prudence Bates, Jane's former student and surrogate daughter. Jane's main preoccupation is matchmaking for Prudence: she likens herself not only... |