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24 Νοε 2013 · The particular concern in this paper is the involvement of women in sport during the Middle Ages and Renaissance period and, indeed, the analysis will examine this involvement as to woman’s role as spectator or participant.
In 1976 Joan Kelly released her influential article “Did Women have a Renaissance?” Kelly argued that women did not enjoy any of the benefits of the period. Rather, she claimed, the lives of women were actually worse after the 1400s than they had been before. Since 1976, new primary documents authored by women have been discovered.
12 Δεκ 2023 · Women exert greater control and choice over their lives and career paths than they did in the Renaissance—but autonomy over their bodies remains in question, or actively denied. The wage disparity persists.
In this illuminating work, surveying 300 years and two nations, Sarah Gwyneth Ross demonstrates how the expanding ranks of learned women in the Renaissance era ...
A Cultural History of Sport is a six-volume series reviewing the evolution of both the internal practices of sport from remote Antiquity to the present and the ways and degrees to which sport has reflected—and been integrated into— contemporary cultural criteria.
Though the Renaissance was a time of immense cultural change, life for women during this period was not easy. As children, parents controlled girls, and then at the time of marriage, women were given to men who would control them as adults. In addition, dowries and marriage negations were a critical element of finding a proper husband. So,
1 Νοε 2020 · ABSTRACT. In this piece we broadly reflect upon the progress made in the production and reception of women’s sports history during the past ten years in the UK. In doing so, we argue that the sources generated via interests in the present are likely to have an impact on the future content of women’s sports history.