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  • The academic wife: who is she today?
    2024/05/28

    In Episode 6 we’re talking about contemporary gendered inequalities of academic labour. Our guests are Katherine Twamley, Professor of Sociology at UCL’s Social Research Institute and Charlotte Faircloth, Associate Professor of Social Science also based at UCL’s Social Research Institute. As well as discussing their recent study exploring how families with children experienced the COVID-19 pandemic which lifted the curtain on gendered dynamics underpinning everyday life, we’re getting their take on what it’s like to be an ‘academic wife’ today.

    Credits

    Guests: Katherine Twamley and Charlotte Faircloth
    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Guest Bios

    Katherine Twamley is a sociologist and founding Programme Director of the UCL BSc Sociology undergraduate programme (2018-2022). She chairs the UCL Sociology Network - the cross-university group for sociologists at UCL - and is an editorial board member of The Sociological Review and editor of the Routledge Sociological Futures book series. Katherine’s research focuses on gender, love and intimacy, social policy, and families, with a particular interest in India and the Indian diaspora. Katherine recently led the British Academy funded FACT-COVID study (with Charlotte Faircloth and Humera Iqbal) which explores how families with children have experienced the COVID-19 pandemic across ten different countries. She tweets @KTwamley.

    Charlotte Faircloth is an Associate Professor of Social Science in the UCL Social Research Institute. With colleagues in the Centre for Parenting Culture Studies at Kent, Charlotte is co-author of Parenting Culture Studies published by Palgrave (2014, with a new edition due out in 2024). She also recently co-edited Parenting in Global Perspective: Negotiating Ideologies of Kinship, Self and Politics published by Routledge and is co-editor of numerous journal special issues, including Sociological Research Online, the Journal of Family Issues and Anthropology and Medicine. She is co-editor of Family Life in a Time of Covid: International Perspectives (2023).

    Episode Resources

    • “Academia as the (com)promised land for women?” in Academic Working Lives: Experiences, Practice and Change - Sandra Acker and Michelle Webber
    • Cannibal Capitalism: How Our System is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Plant – and What We Can Do About It - Nancy Fraser
    • Mumsnet Academic Common Room thread: Male academics with wives/partners who don't work. Anyone else noticed this?

    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological R

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    23 分
  • Slivers and footnotes: recognising wives and women in sociology
    2024/05/14

    In Episode 5 we’re talking about the contribution that wives have made to the discipline of sociology in the past and how this has helped to shape the sociology of the present.

    We’re joined by Lebogang Mokwena, Lecturer in the Department of Historical Studies at the University of Cape Town, and John Goodwin, Professor of Sociology and Sociological Practice at the University of Leicester.

    Lebogang’s work intersects cultural and historical sociology, and as well as work on the cultural, economic and global histories of objects, she has studied the early twentieth century career of the sociologist Sol Plaatje.

    John has a broad interest in sociology as a craft and skill, and, of particular relevance to this discussion, has researched the sociologies of Pearl Jephcott and C. Wright Mills.

    Episode credits

    Guests: Lebogang Mokwena and John Godwin
    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Episode Resources

    • “Searching for pearls: ‘doing biographical research on Pearl Jephcott” John Goodwin
    • “Pearl Jephcott: The legacy of a forgotten sociological research pioneer” John Goodwin and Henrietta O’Connor
    • Married Women Working Pearl Jephcott
    • White Collar: The American Middle Classes C. Wright Mills
    • Lover of His People: A biography of Sol Plaatje Seetsele Modiri Molema
    • Sol T. Plaatje: A Life in Letters Brian Willan and Sabata-mpho Mokae
    • Sol Plaatje: A life of Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje 1876-1932 Brian Willan


    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    29 分
  • The contributions of wives: questions of class
    2024/04/30

    In Episode 4 Ros and Val talk about their own research looking at the contributions of wives to some of the most important social studies of our time. They’re also joined by Selina Todd, Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford whose research focuses on the history of working-class life and women's lives. She is also the author of the Sunday Times bestseller The People: The Rise and Fall of the Working Class 1910-2010, and is currently working on a history of social mobility in modern Britain.

    Episode Credits

    Guests: Selina Todd
    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Episode Resources

    • British Sociology: A History - John Scott
    • Family and Kinship in East London - Michael Young and Peter Wilmott
    • Snakes and Ladders: The Great British Social Mobility Myth - Selina Todd
    • The People: The Rise and Fall of the Working Class 1910-2010 - Selina Todd
    • “#ThanksForTyping … and the fieldwork: the role of sociologists’ wives in classic British studies” - Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    • The Dennis Marsden Collection
    • The Papers of Peter and Phyllis Willmott
    • Search the hashtag #ThanksforTyping on X (formerly twitter)

    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    31 分
  • Wives in the archives: researching wives’ contributions to their husbands’ work
    2024/04/16
    In Episode 3 we’re talking about wives in the archives and asking where we can find out more about the contributions that wives have made to the work of their academic husbands. Joining us are Sophie Bridges, from the Churchill Archives in Cambridge and Chris Renwick, Professor of Modern History at the University of York. Sophie’s work has focused on the personal papers of people involved in social research such as Michael Young and Phyllis Willmott. Chris is the author of British Sociology’s Lost Biological Roots: A History of Futures Past, and he is currently writing a book on the life and work of the sociologist Peter Townsend.

    Episode credits

    Guests: Sophie Bridges and Chris Renwick
    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Episode Resources

    • The Archive Project: Archival Research in the Social Sciences - Niamh Moore, Andrea Salter, Liz Stanley, Maria Tamboukou
    • “The family life of Peter and Ruth Townsend: Social science and methods in 1950s and early 1960s Britain” - Chris Renwick
    • The Peter Townsend Collection - University of Essex.
    • The Papers of Peter and Phyllis Willmott - Churchill Archives
    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    33 分
  • Wifedom: how are wives incorporated in their husbands’ work?
    2024/04/02

    Have you ever thought about the contributions that the wives of academics have made to their husband’s work and how those contributions have been acknowledged? In Episode 1 we’re looking at the #ThanksForTyping that went viral in 2017, shining a spotlight onto the often hidden work of wives over the years. We’re joined by Bruce Holsinger, an author and academic based at the University of Virginia and Miriam David, a feminist educator at University College London, who has written about gender and the academy. We discuss how the hashtag came about and how and why it went viral. We reflect on the unseen contributions of wives to their husbands’ academic work and the implications of that in the past and today.

    Episode Credits

    Guests:
    Bruce Holsinger and Miriam David
    Hosts:
    Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer:
    Chris Garrington
    Music:
    The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork:
    Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Episode Resources

    • Married to the Job - Janet Finch
    • Wifedom; Mrs Orwell’s Invisible Life - Anna Funder

    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    30 分
  • Thanks to my wife: gender and politics in the academy
    2024/03/19

    Have you ever thought about the contributions that the wives of academics have made to their husband’s work and how those contributions have been acknowledged? In Episode 1 we’re looking at the Thanks For Typing hashtag that went viral in 2017, shining a spotlight onto the often hidden work of wives over the years. Ros and Val are joined by the hashtag’s originator, Bruce Holsinger, an author and academic based at the University of Virginia. They’re also joined by Miriam David, a feminist educator at University College London, who has written about gender and the academy. They discuss how the hashtag came about and consider how and why it went viral. They go on to reflect on the unseen contributions of wives to their husbands’ academic work and the implications of that in the past and today.

    Episode Credits

    Guests: Bruce Holsinger and Miriam David
    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Episode Resources

    • David, M. E. (2017). A Feminist Manifesto for Education. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons.
    • David, M. (2015). The State, the Family and Education (Routledge Revivals). Oxfordshire: Routledge.
    • ‌David, M. E. (2016). Feminism, Gender and Universities; Politics, Passion and Pedagogies. Oxfordshire: Routledge.
    • David, M. E. (2003). Personal and political : feminisms, sociology, and family lives. London: Trentham Books.
    • Bristol Women’s Study Group (ed.) (1979). Half the Sky; An Introduction to Women’s Studies. London: Virago.
    • Coe, A. (2013, January 17). Being Married Helps Professors Get Ahead, but Only If They’re Male. The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/sexes/archive/2013/01/being-married-helps-professors-get-ahead-but-only-if-theyre-male/267289/
    • Smith, V. (2024). Hags; The demonisation of middle-aged women. London: Little Brown.
    • Edwards, R., & Gillies, V. (2023, September 11). Working class community life in 1960s Salford: The Trinity Estate. The Modern Backdrop; Modern Architecture and Communities in Salford. https://hub.salford.ac.uk/modern-salford/2023/09/11/working-class-community-life-in-1960s-salford-the-trinity-estate/
    • Mukwana, R. (2022, July 5). Ep 20 A Brief Glimpse Into the Transformative Power of Literature with Bruce Holsinger. Stories and Humanitarian Action (SAHA) Podcast.
    • Search the hashtag #ThanksForTyping on X (formerly twitter).

    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    26 分
  • Welcome to Thanks for Typing
    2024/03/12

    Welcome to Thanks for Typing, a podcast that uncovers the largely invisible contribution of social researchers’ wives to studies that laid the foundations of modern sociology. Presented by Ros Edwards and Val Gillies, with support from Research Podcasts and the Sociological Review Foundation, Episode 1 will be released on Tuesday 19 March, 2024.

    Credits

    Hosts: Ros Edwards and Val Gillies
    Producer: Chris Garrington
    Music: The Beat of Nature, Olexy
    Artwork: Krissie Brighty-Glover

    Find out more about Thanks for Typing at The Sociological Review.

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    2 分