Dorothy Thompson (1) (1923–2011)
Autor de Essential E.P. Thompson
Para otros autores llamados Dorothy Thompson, ver la página de desambiguación.
Sobre El Autor
Créditos de la imagen: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Harris & Ewing Collection
(REPRODUCTION NUMBER: LC-DIG-hec-22284)
(cropped)
Obras de Dorothy Thompson
Obras relacionadas
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Nombre canónico
- Thompson, Dorothy
- Nombre legal
- Thompson, Dorothy Katharine Gane
- Otros nombres
- Towers, Dorothy Katharine Gane (birth name)
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1923-10-30
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 2011-01-29
- Género
- female
- Nacionalidad
- UK
- Lugar de nacimiento
- Greenwich, London, England, UK
- Lugares de residencia
- Halifax, West Yorkshire, England, UK
- Educación
- University of Cambridge (Girton College)
- Ocupaciones
- social historian
professor
writer
campaigner (peace) - Relaciones
- Thompson, E. P. (husband)
Thompson, Kate (daughter) - Organizaciones
- University of Birmingham
Communist Party Historians Group - Biografía breve
- Dorothy Thompson was one of modern Britain's leading socialist and feminist historians and political activists. She specialized in the 19th century Chartist economic and social reform movement, while her husband E.P. Thompson studied the period of history immediately before. Both of them were Communists who left the Party in 1956 and were members of the "New Left."
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Labor History (1)
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 8
- También por
- 1
- Miembros
- 259
- Popularidad
- #88,671
- Valoración
- 3.5
- Reseñas
- 2
- ISBNs
- 35
- Idiomas
- 4
Some stuff in essays
-One about what "the people" meant at the time, basically was used to mean the working class pretty much. Has a good amount of interesting quotes from MPs and chartists
-Women Chartists, women were a big part of the chartist movement but during its final years it became more "masculinised" and in retrospect people tended to erase the women because they weren't respectable. The vote for unmarried women was a pretty common demand. Usually they were supportive mostly of men's demands and eg "A slogan often repeated by men and women in the movement was ‘No women’s work except in the hearth and the schoolroom’." In the movement they often did stuff like organise boycotts of shops that didn't support Chartists
-An essay about what happened in Britain in 1848 - most of the Irish nationalists opposed the Chartists because the biggest organisation was funded by the Catholic church and didn't move further than repeal of the act of union, was deferential to Queen etc. Chartists weren't equipped for violent insurrection in 1848 although in 1839-1840 they probably could have mounted a good effort - by 1848 many had invested themselves in stuff like co-ops and friendly societies and were less motivated
- "Reflections on Marxist Teleology" is kind of weird it's pretty personal and a reflection on eg developing inside the CPGB. Basically says chain of everything leading up to final proletarian revolution is a bad way of thinking. Has a story of talking about the chartists and someone asking why they weren't pushing for 24 hour childcare which would have been a good feminist thing to
Hard to pick out highlights from the essay on Halifax chartism but still some stuff that really impressed me: the focus on arming the working classes and having people prepared in drills etc. Organised ability to disrupt arrests and rescue people who were taken away. Mass turn-out at elections even when they couldn't vote in the actual poll. The strong radicalism of the language and insurrectionary talk. The sheer squalor of every-day life (life expectancy for working class at 22 - the local doctor tried to appeal to the better nature of the propertied in providing medical services etc by showing it'd cost less than the many pauper's funerals) The refusal to capitulate to radical Liberal demands for them to be footsoldiers against the Corn Laws and leave all the politics to their betters. Sometimes the support for Tories over Whigs because Tories showed opposition to poor laws and support for Factory Acts. The disappointing national leadership that floundered in the later years among many acrimonious personal splits and lack of direction.
There's lots of quotes from the Halifax essay I'd love to pull out but it's really good, lots and lots of good stuff. Fascinating. The other essays in the book are generally good if a bit too short except 1 but the book reviews aren't very satisfying. It's not exactly a good intro to the chartists or anything although there's some good stuff.
Overall: the major essays are good, the book as a whole is kind of disappointing due to padding, not a good intro or anything but I learned stuff… (más)