![]() ![]() Literature (Mimesis International), 7 (: Mimesis International, 2018) Nation, community, self : female voices in Scottish theatre from the late Sixties to the present 161-170.ĭomesticating the airwaves : broadcasting, domesticity and femininity Burton and Dane Keith Kennedy (London: Bloomsbury, 2016), pp. Midwifery from Tudors to the 21st century : history, politics and safe practice in England Women’s Studies International Forum, 47 ( November–December 2014) 232-238 Full textĬrime files (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) ‘We were Muslims but we didn’t know Islam’ : Migration, Pakistani Muslim women and changing religious practices in the UK BBIH is a subscription service and is available remotely via university and research libraries worldwide. The Bibliography is a research project of the UK’s Institute of Historical Research and the Royal Historical Society, and is published by Brepols. These records are searchable by a wide range of facets including: title, author, chronology, date and form of publication, historical topic and geographical region. New records are added in three annual updates. It’s an essential resource for research and teaching, providing up-to-date information (and links) on over 634,600 history books, articles, chapters, edited collections and theses. The Bibliography of British and Irish History is the largest and most comprehensive guide available to what’s been written about British and Irish history, from the early 1900s to 2022. ![]() For lecturers, teachers and librarians, the Bibliography’s online tutorials can all be embedded in a virtual learning environment (VLE). Short video guides are designed for new undergraduates, for those planning and researching a final year dissertation, and Masters and PhD students for whom BBIH is essential for writing a literature review and studying secondary fields of interest. You can learn more about using the Bibliography by visiting our page of online tutorials, which include the basics for searching and how to use your results as well as a behind-the-scenes guide to how the BBIH is compiled. Some books also have ‘Full text’ links: these connect to ebook or free Open Access versions of the work where they’ve been made available by the publisher. If you have access to a library that subscribes to the journal, you’ll then be able to go straight to the full text (you may need to log on to your institutional library). This link will take you to the abstract of the article via the publisher’s website. Records for journal articles may include a ‘Full text’ link. Our coverage of recently published titles is ongoing, and further records will be added in future updates of the Bibliography. The list offers 533 recent books, articles and chapters in the field that were published between 20. The following list is a selection of BBIH records that relate to women’s history. The Bibliography defines British and Irish history very broadly, and includes extensive records on histories of race, empire and migration. The Bibliography of British and Irish History (BBIH) provides records of over 634,600 publications (books, journal articles, and chapters in edited collections) relating to British and Irish history. ![]()
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