harriet martineau, Uncategorized

Harriet Martineau – Radical Activism

Abstract Harriet Martineau (1802-1876) was a unique figure in Victorian culture, who contributed to a wide range of intellectual and social debates of the period. She was a writer, sociologist, economist, feminist and disabled activist and abolitionist. As a historical figure she attracts cross-discipline interest for her varied and interesting life. It would be impossible to fit… Continue reading Harriet Martineau – Radical Activism

Research, Uncategorized

In/Visibility, Invalidism and Identity

This presentation was given on 04/10/2019 at the Royal Hospital for Neuro-Disability in London, as part of a Conference on Disability History and Heritage called, "Opening up the Archives"   When I was asked to present, I wasn’t too sure what to present, while my research is interesting, it still feels like it is in… Continue reading In/Visibility, Invalidism and Identity

Research

The Victorian Era – Introduction (Part 1)

The Victorian era was a time period where Queen Victoria was on the throne of Great Britain (and at this time Ireland) between becoming queen on the 20th June 1837 until her death on the 22nd January 1901, a reign of 63 years and 7 months, which at the time was the longest of any… Continue reading The Victorian Era – Introduction (Part 1)

Research

The Crippled Nutmeg Seller – Sensationalitic Voyeurism (Part 2)

This piece uses a primary source about a disabled nutmeg seller as a launchpad to explore concepts of the worthy and unworthy poor in the 19th century. Part1, part 2 is Sensationalistic Voyeurism and part 3 is the Gendering of Disability Victorian melodrama, such as what is evident in this text, presents an “emotional world based… Continue reading The Crippled Nutmeg Seller – Sensationalitic Voyeurism (Part 2)

Research

The Crippled Nutmeg Seller: 19th Century Worthy and Unworthy Poor (Part 1)

This piece uses a primary source about a disabled nutmeg seller as a launchpad to explore concepts of the worthy and unworthy poor in the 19th century. Part 1, part 2 is Sensationalistic Voyeurism and part 3 is the Gendering of Disability The story of the crippled street seller of nutmeg graters is a small glimpse… Continue reading The Crippled Nutmeg Seller: 19th Century Worthy and Unworthy Poor (Part 1)

Disability Life Stories, harriet martineau, Research

Harriet Martineau – Early Years to the publication of Illustrations of the Political Economy

When Harriet was 9 (1812) one of her first lemons was handed to her; the death of her Aunt Martineau.[1]  While Martineau wasn't unfamiliar with death having recollections of mournful feelings when Nelson died when she was four, this death was the first in her family, and her first real introduction to a chronic illness… Continue reading Harriet Martineau – Early Years to the publication of Illustrations of the Political Economy

Disability Life Stories, harriet martineau, Research

Harriet Martineau & Life in the Sick-Room

Following the publication of “Deerbrook,” in April, 1839, Harriet went abroad to transport an invalid cousin to Switzerland, while in Venice she was struck down by an illness and had to be brought back to England on a couch attached to the travelling carriage she and her friends were travelling in. She returned in such… Continue reading Harriet Martineau & Life in the Sick-Room

Disability Life Stories, harriet martineau, Research

Harriet Martineau and Gender

In The Powers of Distance, Amanda Anderson identified the “prevalent Victorian preoccupation with distinctly modern practices of detachment, a preoccupation characterised by ambivalence and uncertainty about what the significance and consequences of such practices might be."[1] There is a central tension in the ambivalence, about achieving objectivity without losing sight of the subjects of observation,… Continue reading Harriet Martineau and Gender

Disability Life Stories, harriet martineau, Research

Harriet Martineau and Deafness

While her writing on issues of disability tends to seek the ‘truth’ that her utilitarianism inspires her to explore and to convey this to wider society, it must be read not only as educational and remote from the author and her lived experience, but influenced by it, in doing so she uses the lemons life… Continue reading Harriet Martineau and Deafness