#ThanksForTyping … and the fieldwork
the role of sociologists’ wives in classic British studies
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7146/serendipities.v9i1.138589Keywords:
academic wives, British community studies, incorporated wives, Pat Marsden, Phyllis Willmott, wives' diariesAbstract
This article explores the role of social researchers’ wives in post-war British studies, in particular drawing on the diaries kept by the wives of two noted sociologists while their husbands, Peter Willmott and Dennis Marsden, were respectively undertaking studies in the working class communities of Bethnal Green and Salford. The wives – Phyllis Willmott and Pat Marsden, made contributions to the community studies in the mid 1950s/early 1960s, at the point where British sociology and social research was on the cusp of transition towards formalisation and professionalisation. The wives were co-opted into the academic endeavour. Their practices as part of their family lives became professionalised as they undertook knowledge gathering, bridging between community and scholarship for their husbands, and reflecting on their own practice. The paper enables contemporary social researchers to recognise the part played by the wives of major sociological figures in the establishment of the men’s reputations and the disciplinary enterprise of sociology.
References
Abrams, Philip and Andrew McCulloch (1976) Communes, Sociology and Society, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ardner, Shirley (1984) Incorporation and exclusion: Oxford academic wives, in: Hilary Callan and Shirley Ardener (eds) The Incorporated Wife, London: Croom Helm, 27-49
Bulmer, Martin (1986) Neighbours: The Work of Philip Abrams, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Crow, Graham (2002) Community studies: fifty years of theorization, Sociological Research Online 7(3): http://www.socresonline.org.uk/7/3/crow.html
Crow, Graham, Linda McKie and John Scott (2023) Historical perspectives on British sociology’s future: an interview with John Scott, Sociology 57(2), 315-324 doi: 10.1177/00380385221107490
Dwyer, Sonia C. and Jennifer L. Buckle (2009) The space between: on being an insider-outsider in qualitative research, International Journal of Qualitative Methods 8(1): 54-63.
Edwards, Rosalind and Val Gillies (2013) ‘Where are the parents?’: Changing parenting responsibilities between the 1960s and the 2010s, in Charlotte Faircloth, Diane M. Hoffman and Linda L. Layne (eds) Parenting in Global Perspective: Negotiating Ideologies of Kinship, Self and Politics, London: Routledge, 21-35.
Finch, Janet (1983) Married to the Job: Wives’ Incorporation in Men’s Work, London: George Allen & Unwin.
Fowlkes, Martha R. (1980) Behind Every Successful Man: Wives of Medicine and Academe, New York: Columbia University.
Frankenberg, Ronald (1979) In the production of their lives, men (?) … sex and gender in British community studies, in Sheila Allen and Diana Leonard Barker (eds) Sexual Divisions and Society: Process and Change, London: Routledge.
Goodwin, John, Henrietta O’Connor and Laurie Parsons (2021) Pearl Jephcott’s ‘troubled areas’: from Nottinghamshire to Notting Hill, Serendipities 6(1), 39-54: 10.7146/serendipities.v6i1.130855.
Hardwick, Kit (2003) Brian Jackson: Educational Innovator and Social Reformer, Cambridge: Lutterworth Press.
Jackson, Brian (1968) Working Class Community: Some General Notions Raised by a Series of Studies in Northern England, London: Routledge.
Jackson, Brian and Dennis Marsden (1962) Education and the Working Class, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Jenkins, Henry (ed.) (1998) The Children’s Culture Reader, New York: New York University Press.
Land, Hilary (1969) Large Families in London: A Study of 86 Families, Occasional Papers on Social Administration No. 32, London: Bell.
Marsden, Dennis, Salford Slum and Rehousing Study, 1962-1963 [unprocessed study]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive [distributor], SN: 6225.
Oakley, Ann (1981) Women interviewing women: a contradiction in terms, in Helen Roberts (ed.) Doing Feminist Research, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Oakley, Ann (1996) Man and Wife: Richard and Kay Titmuss: My Parents’ Early Years, London: Flamingo.
Oakley, Ann (2021) Forgotten Wives: How Women Get Written Out of History, Bristol: Policy Press.
Papanek, Hanna (1973) Men, women and work: reflections on the two-person career, American Journal of Sociology, 78(4): 852-872.
Platt, Jennifer (1971) Social Research in Bethnal Green: An Evaluation of the Work of the Institute of Community Studies, London: Macmillan.
Platt, Jennifer (1976) The Realities of Social Research: An Empirical Study of British Sociologists, Falmer: Sussex University Press.
Prentice, Alison (2006) Boosting husbands and building community: the work of twentieth-century faculty wives, in Paul Stortz and E. Lisa Panayotidis (eds) The Historical Identities, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 271-296.
Renwick, C. (2023) The family life of Peter and Ruth Townsend: social science and methods in 1950s and early 1960s Britain, Twentieth Century British History, 34(4): 634-656.
Rosser, Colin and Chris C. Harris (1965) Family and Social Change: A Study of Family and Kinship in a South Wales Town, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Savage, Mike (2010) Identities and Social Change in Britain Since 1940: The Politics of Method, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Savage, Mike (2022) History and Sociology: a twenty-first century rapprochement?, Twentieth Century British History, 33(3): 416-431.
Scott, John (2020) British Sociology: A History, Basingstoke: Palgrave Pivot.
Smith, Robert J. (1990) ‘Hearing voices, joining the chorus: appropriating some else’s fieldnotes’, in Robert Sanjek (ed.) Fieldnotes: The Making of Anthropology, pp. 356-370, New York: Cornell University Press.
Stanley, Liz (2017) Archival methodology inside the black box: noise in the archive!, in Niamh Moore, Andrea Salter, Liz Stanley and Maria Tamboukou, The Archive Project: Archival Research in the Social Sciences, Abingdon: Routledge, 33-68.
Thompson, Paul (2019) Pioneers of Social Research, 1996-2018. [data collection], UK Data Service. SN: 6226, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6226-6
Titmuss, Richard and Titmuss, Kathleen (1942) Parents Revolt: A Study of the Declining Birth-Rate in Acquisitive Societies, Secker & Warburg.
Topalov, Christian (2003) Traditional working-class neighborhoods: an inquiry into the emergence of a sociological model in the 1950s and 1960s, Osiris 18: 212-233.
Townsend, Peter (1962) The Last Refuge: A Survey of Residential Institutions and Homes for the Aged in England and Wales, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Young, Michael and Peter Willmott (1957) Family and Kinship in East London, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Willmott, Peter (1985) The Institute of Community Studies, in Martin Bulmer (ed.) Essays on the History of British Sociological Research, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 137-150.
Willmott, Phyllis, The Papers of Peter and Phyllis Willmott Collection, 1933-2006, Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge, GBR/0014/WLMT 1-3.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Rosalind Edwards, Val Gillies
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
CC-BY-NC-ND