Zoekresultaten
Resultaat 161 - 167 (van 167)
Katja Pilhuj Women and geography on the early modern English stage
Non-fictie
Engels | 276 pagina's | Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam | 2019
Gedrukt boek
Susan M. Cogan Catholic social networks in early modern England
kinship, gender, and coexistence
Non-fictie
Engels | 296 pagina's | Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam | 2021
Gedrukt boek
Ria Menting No regresar al pasado
tierra natal, colonización, guerra, refugio y retorno según la perspectiva de la mujer
Non-fictie
Spaans | 620 pagina's | [Menting], [Nederland] | 2022
Gedrukt boek
Women and power at the French court, 1463-1563
Non-fictie
Engels | 384 pagina's | Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam | 2018
Gedrukt boek
Gendered food practices from seed to waste
In nearly all societies gender has been, and continues to be, central in defining roles and responsibilities related to the production, manufacturing, provisioning, eating, and disposal of food. The 2016 Yearbook of Women’s History presents a collection of articles that look into food-related practices and shifting relations of gender across food systems. Authors explore changing understandings of food-related activities at the intersection of food and gender, across time and space. Articles about...
Non-fictie
Engels | 208 pagina's | Verloren, publisher, Hilversum | 2017
Gedrukt boek
Gender and activism
women’s voices in political debate
Focus on various ways in which women were active and organized themselves in order to question sex and gender related issues in the political arena. The authors discuss how women protested against perceived religious suppression; participated in local democratic political institutions whilst not really changing gender roles; discussed discrepancies between socialism and feminism. They explore how women find their ways in democratic systems of governance and what these systems offer women in terms...
Non-fictie
Engels | 155 pagina's | Verloren, Amsterdam | 2015
Gedrukt boek
René P. Bersma Titia
the first Western woman in Japan
In 1817 Jan Cock Blomhoff travelled to Japan and brought with him his young wife Titia and his son. Never before did a Western woman set foot on Japanese soil and the Japanese were astonished. Author and distant relative of Titia René Bersma relates the exceptional and dramatic story of this woman who sails her own course, against all rules of precedent which governed Japanese society at that time, but in the end is forced to leave the country. Shortly after her arrival back in Holland she dies...
Non-fictie
Engels | 24 pagina's | Hotei Publishing, Amsterdam | 2002
Gedrukt boek