Shirley Ardener

Shirley G. Ardener is a pioneer of research on women (doing women’s studies more-or-less avant la lettre) and a committed anthropological researcher working with Bakweri people in Cameroon since the 1950s, initially with her husband Edwin Ardener (1927–1987).

Career

In 1964, she published[1] an important analysis of forms of credit (Rotating credit associations) that has been influential on subsequent work on the informal economy and microcredit systems: see Rotating savings and credit association. Her work as editor has seen the publication of many key texts such as Perceiving Women, 1975. This collection also includes her essay Sexual Insult and Female Militancy, a foundational text demonstrating how the personal can be made deeply political.

She helped found and was the founding director of the Centre for Cross-Cultural Research on Women (CCCRW) at Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford informally since 1973, formally since 1983 (Davies and Waldren 2007: 252). The CCCRW has now become the International Gender Studies Centre (IGS) based at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.

She was the minute taker at the meeting that Dag Hammarskjöld had in Cameroon in the run up to independence in Cameroon on 2 January 1959.[2]

Awards and honours

Ardener won the Welcome Medal for Anthropology in 1962.[3][4] She was awarded the OBE in 1991.[5] (other dates have been given: Davies and Waldren 2007:257 say 1989, Swaisland 2007: 272 gives 1990)

Selected publications

  • Perceiving Women (editor and contributor), Berg Publications, 1975
  • Defining Females (editor and contributor), Berg, 1978
  • Women and Space; ground rules and social maps (editor and contributor), Berg, 1981
  • The Incorporated Wife (co-editor and contributor) Berg, 1984
  • Visibility and Power, Essays on Women in Society and Development (co-editor, and contributor) OUP India, 1986
  • Persons and Powers of Women (ed. and contributor), Berg, 1992
  • Women and Missions, co-editor, Berg, 1993
  • Bilingual Women, co-editor, Berg, 1994
  • Money-Go-Rounds; women's use of rotating savings and credit associations (co-editor and contributor), 1995
  • Kingdom on Mount Cameroon (annotated edition of papers by Edwin Ardener) Berghahn Books, 1996
  • Swedish Ventures in Cameroon; trade and travel; people and politics, 1883-1923, annotated edition of Knutson's memoirs. Berghahn Books, 2002
  • Changing Sex and Bending Gender (co-editor, and contributor) Berghahn Books, 2005
  • Professional Identities; Policy and Practice in Business and Bureaucracy (co-editor) Berghahn Books, 2007
  • War and Women Across Continents (co-editor and contributor), Berghahn Books 2016
gollark: Idea for an instruction set: x86-64 MOV, but no other instructions.
gollark: I guess so. ARM SoCs for phones already have the high/low-powered cores dichotomy.
gollark: I think what would be pretty good is having CPUs with a few high-single-thread-perf cores, like we have now, some lower-powered cores, and a lot of parallel processing ones (like GPUs).
gollark: ARM is improving *really* fast.
gollark: I mean, RISC-V is kind of good but I think more complex instructions might actually be a good idea, to keep the CPU execution bits happy and fed with stuff to do.

References

  1. Ardener, Shirley (1964). "The Comparative Study of Rotating Credit Associations". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 94 (2): 201–229. doi:10.2307/2844382. ISSN 0307-3114. JSTOR 2844382.
  2. Ardener, Edwin (1996). Kingdom on Mount Cameroon: Studies in the History of the Cameroon Coast, 1500-1970. Berghahn Books. pp. from her Editor's introduction p xiii. ISBN 9781571810441.
  3. "Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. Wellcome medal (MS 189)". www.therai.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-05-11.
  4. "The Wellcome Medal for Research in Anthropology as Applied to Medical Problems Past Awards". www.therai.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-05-11.
  5. "The London Gazette" (PDF). The London Gazette.

Sources

  • Janette Davies and Jacqueline Waldren. "Gendering Oxford: Shirley Ardener and Cross-Cultural Research" in Identity and Networks: Gender and Ethnicity in a Cross-Cultural Context (Deborah Fahy Bryceson, Judith Okely, and Jonathan Webber, eds) (Berghahn Books; 2007) (ISBN 978-1-84545-161-5)
  • Cecillie Swaisland. "Shirley's African Roots" in Identity and Networks: Gender and Ethnicity in a Cross-Cultural Context (Deborah Fahy Bryceson, Judith Okely, and Jonathan Webber, eds) (Berghahn Books; 2007) (ISBN 978-1-84545-161-5)

Further reading

Festschrift
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.