1,687 research outputs found
Review of “A Herstory of Economics” by Edith Kuiper
Review of “A Herstory of Economics” by Edith Kuiper
[News Clip: Edith Deen]
Video footage from the WBAP-TV television station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story about author, columnist, and lecturer Edith Alderman Deen receiving an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Texas Women's University
Conversations with authors: Edith Pearlman
A 2011 conversation with the author Edith Pearlman about her life and the inspiration for her work
Interview with Major Edith Vowell Part 2
Anna Maria Island author included Major Edith Vowell in his book, Combat Nurses of World War II. Here she tells her story, with adventures in Brisbane, Australia, on ships and a GI troop train. She also lists her postwar nursing postings
\u3cem\u3eFeminist Economics: Critical Concepts\u3c/em\u3e, ed. Drucilla K. Barker and Edith Kuiper
Book Review: A Herstory of Economics by Edith Kuiper:(Cambridge: Polity Press, 2022. 214 pp. ISBN: 9781509538423)
A herstory is a more than welcome complement to the standard male-dominated encyclopedia and handbooks of economists of the past. A Herstory of Economics, enjoyably written by Edith Kuiper, is a comprehensive treasure box including many more women economic writers and women economists than one would expect given its relatively limited size (173 pages of main text, excluding the index and bibliography). To be precise, the book includes ninety-eight women authors. Some writing about economic topics without having an academic status, others as trained economists, although this distinction is less clear the further one goes back into history because the academic discipline of economics is much younger than its subject. It is probably for that reason that Kuiper does not bother much with analyzing the distinction, and rightly so, I think. What matters is that these women wrote about economic life, economic ideas, and economic policy. And some of the women, as Kuiper reveals from her detailed archival work and wide reading, had important economic roles themselves, as investors, entrepreneurs, employers, bankers, and traders. [...
\u3cem\u3eToward a Feminist Philosophy of Economics\u3c/em\u3e, ed. Drucilla K. Barker and Edith Kuiper
\u3cem\u3eFeminist Economics and the World Bank: History, Theory and Policy\u3c/em\u3e, ed. Drucilla Barker and Edith Kuiper
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