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Abstracts

Abstracts NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS (Manchester University Press 1999), Fashion (Oxford University Press 2003), and co- edited collections Material Memories (Berg 1999) and The Englishness of English Dress (Berg 2002). Email: c.breward@lcf.linst.ac.uk. Andrew Saint teaches in the Department of Architecture, University of Cambridge, and has written widely on architecture and London. He was architectural editor of the Survey of London between 1974 and 1986. Email: ~s61@cam.ac.uk. Julie Schlarman is currently employed as a Senior Research Officer in the Depart- ment of Art History and Theory at the University of Essex, on an AHRB project exploring concepts of selfhood in post-1945 architecture. Her research focuses on the social and architectural history of eighteenth-century London and her recent PhD from the University of Southampton explored the influence and impact of the townhouse, street and garden square on social roles. Email:jschlar@essex.ac.uk. JULIE SCHLARMAN, The Social Geography of Grosvenor Square: Mapping Gender and Politics, 1720-1760 This paper explores the manner in which architectural and urban forms staged social performance. Drawing on architectural theory regarding the uses of space, it reveals the manner in which the urban environment provided various spatial· stages upon which to establish and promote social standing, political alliance and gender relationships. Evidence http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The London Journal: A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present Taylor & Francis

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2003 Maney Publishing
ISSN
1749-6322
eISSN
0305-8034
DOI
10.1179/ldn.2003.28.1.iii
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS (Manchester University Press 1999), Fashion (Oxford University Press 2003), and co- edited collections Material Memories (Berg 1999) and The Englishness of English Dress (Berg 2002). Email: c.breward@lcf.linst.ac.uk. Andrew Saint teaches in the Department of Architecture, University of Cambridge, and has written widely on architecture and London. He was architectural editor of the Survey of London between 1974 and 1986. Email: ~s61@cam.ac.uk. Julie Schlarman is currently employed as a Senior Research Officer in the Depart- ment of Art History and Theory at the University of Essex, on an AHRB project exploring concepts of selfhood in post-1945 architecture. Her research focuses on the social and architectural history of eighteenth-century London and her recent PhD from the University of Southampton explored the influence and impact of the townhouse, street and garden square on social roles. Email:jschlar@essex.ac.uk. JULIE SCHLARMAN, The Social Geography of Grosvenor Square: Mapping Gender and Politics, 1720-1760 This paper explores the manner in which architectural and urban forms staged social performance. Drawing on architectural theory regarding the uses of space, it reveals the manner in which the urban environment provided various spatial· stages upon which to establish and promote social standing, political alliance and gender relationships. Evidence

Journal

The London Journal: A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and PresentTaylor & Francis

Published: May 1, 2003

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