Skip to main content

School of History

  • Home
  • About us
  • People
    • Head of School
    • Academics
    • ADB academics
    • Research officers
    • Emeritus Professors
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors and Honorary Appointees
    • Current PhD students
    • Graduated PhD students
    • Alumni
  • Events
    • Event series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
    • Audio/Video Recordings
    • In the media
  • Students
    • Study with us
    • Current students
    • Minoru Hokari scholarship
    • Overseas study tours
  • Research
    • Books
  • Contact us

Research Centres

  • Australian Centre for Indigenous History
  • Centre for Environmental History
  • National Centre of Biography
  • Research Centre for Deep History

Australian Centre for Indigenous History

Centre for Environmental History

National Centre of Biography

ARC Laureate Program

  • Rediscovering the Deep Human Past
    • About
    • Advisory Committee
    • News
    • Events
    • People
      • Collaborating Scholars
      • Visitors
    • Collaborating Institutions
    • Contact

Resources

School of History

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • Australian Journey
  • One Hundred Stories

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsAllan Martin 2013 Public Lecture
Allan Martin 2013 Public Lecture

 

Living with the Dead:

My time with a Stocking Maker in the Era of Luddism

followed by a reception in the Coombs extension

ALLAN MARTIN 2013 PUBLIC LECTURE

Professor Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick

Historians spend a lot of their time with the dead. We write with the words of the dead and gone. Who owns those words? Who owns history? Who has the right to speak for the dead?

I had to ask these questions about Joseph Woolley, framework knitter of Nottinghamshire, and the six volumes of gossip, anecdotes and accounts he wrote between 1800 and 1815. He lived at the epicentre of the machine-breaking crisis of Regency England, but never once mentioned General Ludd, the mythical leader of men and women protesting against de-skilling in the stocking trade. Did Joseph Woolley have a claim to historical attention? Why would I want to write about him?

Early on in the project, I had a dream in which an anonymous global historian turned to me, looked me straight in the eye and said: Tell me, Carolyn: What exactly is the point of writing a book about an obscure, English working-class man, in the face of the great procedures and protocols of global history? My lecture describes my five long years with Joseph Woolley, and writing about him in my own historiographical times.

Carolyn Steedman is Professor of History at the University of Warwick, where she has taught since 1984. Among her many books are Landscape for a Good Woman (1986),The Radical Soldier’s Tale (1988), Dust (2001), and Labours Lost. Domestic Service and the Making of Modern England (2009). The book about Joseph Woolley, An Everyday Life of the English Working Class, will be published by Cambridge University Press in 2013. She was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2011.

Date & time

  • Tue 07 May 2013, 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

Location

Coombs Lecture Theatre, Fellows Road, ANU

Event Series

Allan Martin Lecture Series

Contact