Gill, Rebecca (Hrsg.); Barber, Claire (Hrsg.); Dampier, Helen (Hrsg.); Taithe, Bertrand (Hrsg.)

Humanitarian Handicraft History, Materiality and Trade, c. 1840-1980 - Manchester Manchester University Press 2025 - 304 Seiten - Humanitarianism: Key Debates and New Approaches .

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Introduction: the meanings and making of humanitarian handicraft - Claire Barber, Helen Dampier, Rebecca Gill and Bertrand Taithe1 Literary visions of craft and cooperation in the European handmade lace revival, c. 1840-1914 - David Hopkin2 Work of hands: humanitarian craft and fair trade in Britain and Ireland, 1885-1914 - Janice Helland3 Thinking Anglo-American industrial relief through Armenian needlework in the late 1890s: humanitarian marketing ethics, agency and identity - Stâephanie Prâevost4 Emily Hobhouse and the Koppies Lace School, 1908-26 - Helen Dampier and Rebecca Gill5 Beyond gratitude. Belgian women, humanitarian organisations and lace-aid programmes in the First World War - Wendy Wiertz6 Threads of friendship: Quaker women, peasant handicrafts and educational reconstruction in Russia and Poland, 1916-39 - Siãan Roberts7 Politics woven as missionary craft: the carpets of the White Fathers and Sisters from the 1920s - Bertrand Taithe8 Caught in the net: cooperation of lacemakers in the Vologda region, 1880s-1930s - Elizaveta Berezina9 Crafting Communist Paternalism: the voices of lacemakers in Koniakâow, Poland, 1947-62 - Nicolette Makovicky10 Humanitarian handicrafts as (dis)empowerment of women left behind. A Swedish help to self-help project in the Northern Greek village Vlasti, 1963-88 - Maria Smêaberg11 Humanitarian handicrafts: in conversation - Catherine Bertola, Claire Barber, Helen Dampier, Rebecca Gill and June HillAfterword - Jessica Hemm

9781526188045

9781526188045 978-1-5261-8804-5


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