ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Edinburgh University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780748617135
RRP: £105.00
PAGES: 440
PUBLICATION DATE:
March 8, 2006
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The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women: From Earliest Times to 2004
Elizabeth L. Ewan
Sue Innes
Sian Reynolds
Rose Pipes
This single-volume dictionary presents the lives of individual Scottish women from earliest times to the present. Drawing on new scholarship and a wide network of professional and amateur historians, it will throw light on the experience of women from every class and category in Scotland and among the worldwide Scottish diaspora. The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is written for the general reading public and for students of Scottish history and society. It is scholarly in its approach to evidence and engaging in the manner of its presentation. Each entry seeks to make sense of its subject in narrative terms, telling a story rather than simply offering information. The editors aim to make the book as enjoyable to read as it will be easy and valuable to consult. It will be a unique and important contribution to the history of women and Scotland. The publisher acknowledges support from the Scottish Arts Council and the Scottish Executive Equalities Unit towards the publication of this title. Downloads You can access a full list of women featured in the BDSW here: www.eup.ed.ac.uk/Book Downloads/BDSW1.doc Download a full list of works by women featured in the BDSW here: www.eup.ed.ac.uk/Book Downloads/BDSW2.doc The Dictionary suffered from space constraints and sadly not all women originally considered could be included: for the full, original list, click here: www.eup.ed.ac.uk/Book Downloads/BDSW3.doc
Reviews of The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women: From Earliest Times to 2004
'The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is a tour de force of scholarship, commitment, canny decision-making, and unstinting effort on the part of the editors and their 280 contributors. It replaces well-worn generalities and nagging gaps with sprightly details and moving stories. What the editors call "the remembered Scottish past" has just become exponentially richer. — Christine Bold Times Literary Supplement A splendid book, with fascinating lives on every page — Ian Jack The Guardian A landmark in the development of Scottish historical studies." — Christopher A Whatley In spite of the recent explosion of Scottish historiography, few would deny that there is still a huge amount to be done. With The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women there is a great leap forward. It pushes out the frontiers not because it is a book about women, but because it tells us so much about Scotland's people. By shining a light on the lives of 830 women, it illuminates social relationships! It is an extraordinarily moving book, not only because it gives us so wide-ranging a picture of female activity and achievement, but because these dictionary entries convey, remarkably, a real sense of flesh and blood, and of Scottish society, especially over the last 400 years! Each entry has been given sufficient space to tell a real story, and the 280 contributors have responded to that opportunity. The result is a collection of narratives that meld into something much more than a reference book. It is a magnificent memorial to the late Sue Innes, one of the book's editors and instigators. — Jenni Calder The Scotsman Must surely represent one of the most important landmarks in Scottish publishing history! The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is a unique contribution to the study of Scottish women's biography and an outstanding reference work which yields discoveries on every page… no home in Scotland should be without a copy. The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is not just about Scottish women but about the wider, and under-told, story of Scotland itself. — Iain Hutchison I found myself inflicted by the minor trauma one suffers in reading a good reference tome — head full of page numbers to flick to next, fingers in an implausible tort, keeping pages marked, making notes on a newspaper of entries to check out later. — Roddy Lumsden BooksfromScotland.com The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women has been awaited with anticipation for some time… The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is not just about Scottish women but about the wider, and under-told, story of Scotland itself. — Ian C. Hutchison, University of Stirling Scottish Studies Review 'The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is a tour de force of scholarship, commitment, canny decision-making, and unstinting effort on the part of the editors and their 280 contributors. It replaces well-worn generalities and nagging gaps with sprightly details and moving stories. What the editors call "the remembered Scottish past" has just become exponentially richer. A splendid book, with fascinating lives on every page A landmark in the development of Scottish historical studies." In spite of the recent explosion of Scottish historiography, few would deny that there is still a huge amount to be done. With The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women there is a great leap forward. It pushes out the frontiers not because it is a book about women, but because it tells us so much about Scotland's people. By shining a light on the lives of 830 women, it illuminates social relationships! It is an extraordinarily moving book, not only because it gives us so wide-ranging a picture of female activity and achievement, but because these dictionary entries convey, remarkably, a real sense of flesh and blood, and of Scottish society, especially over the last 400 years! Each entry has been given sufficient space to tell a real story, and the 280 contributors have responded to that opportunity. The result is a collection of narratives that meld into something much more than a reference book. It is a magnificent memorial to the late Sue Innes, one of the book's editors and instigators. Must surely represent one of the most important landmarks in Scottish publishing history! The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is a unique contribution to the study of Scottish women's biography and an outstanding reference work which yields discoveries on every page… no home in Scotland should be without a copy. The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is not just about Scottish women but about the wider, and under-told, story of Scotland itself. I found myself inflicted by the minor trauma one suffers in reading a good reference tome — head full of page numbers to flick to next, fingers in an implausible tort, keeping pages marked, making notes on a newspaper of entries to check out later. The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women has been awaited with anticipation for some time… The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women is not just about Scottish women but about the wider, and under-told, story of Scotland itself.
Elizabeth L. Ewan
Elizabeth Ewan has a PhD from the University of Edinburgh and is University Research Chair in History at the University of Guelph, Ontario. She is author of Townlife in Fourteenth-Century Scotland (Edinburgh University Press, 1990) and co-editor (with Maureen Meikle) of Women in Scotland, c. 1100-c.1700 (Tuckwell Press, 1999). Sue Innes was Research Fellow, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships, Glasgow Caledonian University. Following a career in journalism she returned to study, completing a PhD at the University of Edinburgh in 1998. She was author of Making it Work: Women, Change and Challenge in the 1990s (Chatto and Windus 1995) and Keeping Gender on the Agenda: Participative democracy and the Scottish Parliament (Engender April 1999). Sian Reynolds is Professor of French at Stirling University. She has a doctorate in history from the University of Paris-VII, and has published monographs on both French and Scottish history, including Britannica’s Typesetters: Women Compositors in Edwardian Scotland (Edinburgh University Press, 1989). Other publications include France Between the Wars: Gender and Politics (Routledge, 1996) and (co-edited with William Kidd) Contemporary French Cultural Studies (Arnold, 2000). Rose Pipes is formerly a commissioning editor with Oliver & Boyd educational publishers, Edinburgh, is now a freelance publishing consultant, editor and writer. Her own publications include two books of local history, The Colonies of Stockbridge (David Flatman, 1984) and Stockbridge in Living Memory (David Flatman, 1994).