Emma Griffin
Historian
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History
Emma Griffin's Degrees
- Bachelors History University of Oxford
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Why Is Emma Griffin Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Emma Griffin is professor of modern British history at Queen Mary University of London with particular interests in the industrial revolution and in social and gender history. She is the author of five books. Her second book, Blood Sport, was awarded the Lord Aberdare Prize for Literary History. She is the President of the Royal Historical Society, and joint editor of The Historical Journal. She is part of the Living with Machines research project – a multi-disciplinary digital history project based at The Alan Turing Institute and the British Library, which seeks to rethink the impact of technology on the lives of ordinary people during the Industrial Revolution.
Emma Griffin's Published Works
Published Works
- A Short History of the British Industrial Revolution (2010) (76)
- Liberty's Dawn: A People's History of the Industrial Revolution (2013) (52)
- Blood Sport: Hunting in Britain since 1066 (2007) (28)
- A Conundrum Resolved? Rethinking Courtship, Marriage and Population Growth in Eighteenth-Century England (2012) (26)
- Diets, Hunger and Living Standards During the British Industrial Revolution (2018) (25)
- POPULAR CULTURE IN INDUSTRIALIZING ENGLAND (2002) (21)
- England's Revelry: A History of Popular Sports and Pastimes, 1660-1800 (2005) (19)
- Childhood and Child Labour in Industrial England: Diversity and Agency, 1750–1914 (2015) (11)
- Sex, illegitimacy and social change in industrializing Britain (2013) (10)
- A Growing Population (2010) (9)
- The Emotions of Motherhood: Love, Culture, and Poverty in Victorian Britain (2018) (9)
- Sports and celebrations in English market towns, 1660–1750 (2002) (7)
- The Making of the Chartists: Popular Politics and Working-class Autobiography in Early Victorian Britain. (2014) (7)
- Dusty Bob: A Cultural History of Dustmen, 1780–1870. By Brian Maidment. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007. Distributed by Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. xvi+251. $84.95. (2010) (4)
- The Making of Modernity (2015) (3)
- 'Wholesome recreations and cheering influences':Popular recreation and social elites in 18th-century Britain (2015) (3)
- Sons of Freedom (2013) (3)
- Patterns of Industrialisation (2012) (2)
- Structures and Transformations in Modern British History: The ‘urban renaissance’ and the mob: rethinking civic improvement over the long eighteenth century (2010) (2)
- The Value of Motherhood: Understanding Motherhood from Maternal Absence in Victorian Britain* (2020) (2)
- The Chronicles of John Cannon: Excise Officer and Writing Master, Part 1: 1684–1733 (Somerset, Oxfordshire, Berkshire); Part 2: 1734–1743 (Somerset), ed. John Money (2012) (1)
- The Industrial Revolution : Social costs and social change (2017) (1)
- Parents of Poor Children in England, 1580–1800 (2011) (1)
- Master and Servant Law: Chartists, Trade Unions, Radical Lawyers and the Magistracy in England, 1840–1865, by Christopher Frank (2012) (1)
- Provincial towns: streets and squares, 1660–1750 (2005) (1)
- The Urban Working Class in Britain, 1830–1914. Edited by Andrew August . 4 vols. Pickering and Chatto. 2013. 1856pp. £350.00. (2014) (0)
- Violence and Sport, 1800–2000 (2020) (0)
- Worlds of Work (2010) (0)
- Liberty's Dawn (2017) (0)
- Bull-baiting: intellectual history (2005) (0)
- Counting Growth: Measuring the Economy (2010) (0)
- Provincial towns: streets and squares, 1750–1830 (2005) (0)
- Master and Servant: Love and Labour in the English Industrial Age (2009) (0)
- An Anniversary and New Departure: Transactions, 1872–2022 (2022) (0)
- Reviews (2011) (0)
- Locating the industrial revolution: inducement and response – By Eric L. Jones (2012) (0)
- Coal: The Key to the British Industrial Revolution? (2010) (0)
- ‘The meal-ticket’ (2020) (0)
- A Mobile Population (2010) (0)
- The ‘Mechanical Age’: Technology, Innovation and Industrialisation (2010) (0)
- Conclusion (2020) (0)
- Overview of Benthic Organisms (2020) (0)
- Hunting and the Politics of Violence before the English Civil War (review) (2011) (0)
- 100% of the World Ocean Floor Mapped by 2030 - Contribution of the South and West Pacific Regional Data Assembly and Coordination Centre to the Seabed 2030 Initiative (2017) (0)
- Winners and Losers: Living through the Industrial Revolution (2010) (0)
- Doing the Wife (2011) (0)
- Naughty Tricks on the Bed (2013) (0)
- Diversity of Marine Species (2020) (0)
- Work and leisure (2020) (0)
- Space for recreation in industrial England (2005) (0)
- The Industrial Revolution (2017) (0)
- Seclusion Reduction on an Adult Inpatient Psychiatric Unit: A Quality Improvement Project. (2021) (0)
- The Early English Censuses, by E.A. Wrigley (2013) (0)
- Popular sports and celebrations in England, 1660-1850 (2000) (0)
- “Things I Can Remember about My Life”: Autobiography and Fatherhood in Victorian Britain (2021) (0)
- Margaret C. Jacob, The first knowledge economy: human capital and the European economy, 1750–1850 ( Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014. Pp. ix + 257. 11 figs. 2 maps. ISBN 9781107619838 Pbk. £19.99; Hbk. £55) (2015) (0)
- Violence in Sport (2017) (0)
- Suffer Little Children (2013) (0)
- The demise of bull-baiting (2005) (0)
- A Brand New Wife and an Empty Pocket (2013) (0)
- Introduction: ‘A Simple Naritive’ (2013) (0)
- Bull-baiting in industrialising townships (2001) (0)
- ‘Real drudgery’ (2020) (0)
- Women, Work and the Cares of Home (2013) (0)
- Bread Winner (2020) (0)
- Importance of Suez Canal in International Trade (2021) (0)
- Men at Work (2013) (0)
- Industrial towns and townships, 1750–1840 (2005) (0)
- Vanishing Acts (2017) (0)
- Regulating Health and Safety in the British Mining Industries, 1800–1914, by Catherine Mills (2011) (0)
- The market square as cultural space: the changing uses of civic space in England, 1750-1850 (2012) (0)
- Why Was Britain First? The Global Context for Industrialisation (2010) (0)
- Recipe Extracts From the Asian Remedies Project (2006) (0)
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