List of figures
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
1. Inside the museum: including or excluding women?
2. Outside the museum: women as donors and vendors
3. Outside the museum: women's donations, materiality and the
museum object
4. Women visiting museums
5. Women as patrons: the limits of agency?
6. New disciplines: archaeology, anthropology and women in
museums
7. Ruskin, women and museums: service and salvage
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Kate Hill is Principal Lecturer in History at the University of Lincoln
‘Kate Hill’s Women and Museums, 1850–1914: Modernity and the
Gendering of Knowledge, part of Manchester University Press’s
Gender in History series, is not only a masterful work of
historical scholarship and careful theoretical, historiographical,
and methodological intervention, but also a bracingly relevant and
important book. In her sophisticated and nuanced treatment of
gender and museums (including all kinds of collections, in all
kinds of institutional settings), Hill makes a remarkable
contribution that deserves to be read by all those interested in
Victorian history and gender, as well as those specifically
studying museums and collections. Crucially, her work also helps us
think about the interactions between gender, power, and knowledge
production in our own day. What comes out of this remarkable study,
then, is a new way to appreciate the extraordinarily malleable and
fascinating space that is the modern museum, in all of its many
guises.’
Amy Woodson-Boulton, Loyola Marymount University, Victorian
Studies, Vol 60, No. 3
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