Gender and Space in Rural Britain, 1840-1920

(Jacob Rumans) #1

Notes to pages 154–8 185



  1. M. Wallace, ‘Th e Politics of Location: Cinema/Th eory/Literature/Ethnicity/Sexuality/
    Me’, Framework, 36 (1989), pp. 42–55, on p. 53.

  2. Little, My Diary in a Chinese Farm, pp. 69–71.

  3. A. Rose, Gender and Victorian Reform (UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008), p.
    191.

  4. N. J. Cliff ord, ‘A Truthful Impression of the Country’: British and American Travel Writ-
    ing, 1880–1949 (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2004), p. 47.

  5. Little, My Diary in a Chinese Farm, p. 11.

  6. Ibid.

  7. L. Bryant, ‘Th e Detraditionalisation of Occupational Identities in Farming in South
    Australia’, Sociologia Ruralis, 39 (1999), pp. 236–61, on p. 255 and A. Hughes, ‘Rurality
    and “Cultures of Womanhood”’, in Cloke and Little (eds), Contested Countryside Cul-
    tures, pp. 123–37.

  8. L. Liu, ‘Th e Female Body and Nationalist Discourse’, in Grewal and Kaplan (eds), Scat-
    tered Hegemonies, pp. 63–75, on p. 40.

  9. Friedman, Mappings, p. 118.

  10. R. Bernstein, Th e New Constellation: Th e Ethnical-Political Horizons of Modernity/Post-
    modernity (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1992), p. 174.

  11. Ibid., p. 174.

  12. Ag yeman and Spooner, ‘Ethnicity and the Rural Environment’, p. 201.

  13. J. Kristeva, Strangers to Ourselves (New York: Columbia University Press, 1991), p. 13.

  14. Said, Th e World, the Text, and the Critic, p. 23.

  15. Little, My Diary in a Chinese Farm, p. 74.

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