Acknowledgments
1: Introduction
2: Girlhood (1893-1910)
3: UCL s women and pre-war feminism: Tessa Verney s models
4: Education and the War (1910-1918)
5: Wales (1920-1927)
6: London (1928-1936)
7: Lydney Park, Gloucestershire (1928-1929)
8: Verulamium, Hertfordshire (1930-1933)
9: Public archaeology, publically performed: Mosaics and
reporters
10: Maiden Castle, Dorset (1934-1937)
11: The legacies of the dead
Appendices
1: Timeline
2: Verney Wheeler: An ongoing bibliography
Bibliography
L. C. Carr took her D.Phil at Oxford in 2008, where her dissertation focused on Tessa Verney Wheeler's life and work. This is her first book.
... A thoughtful analysis and a good read.
*Margarita Diaz-Andreu, Times Higher Education*
This is, primarily, that too rare thing, a sensitive and convincing
biography of an archaeologist ... Carr explains that her task is
not to explore or defend the concept of women in archaeology. While
the book is informed with a social and academic feminist awareness,
it takes care not to exploit Verney Wheeler to promote an
agenda.
*Mike Pitts, British Archaeology*
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