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Overview"""She was,"" George Bernard Shaw wrote, ""a great citizen, a great civilizer, and a great investigator."" For many she represented the triumph of the independent Englishwoman, for others little more than a heroic failure. But whatever responses Beatrice Webb provoked in her unusual life, she could scarcely be ignored. In this fine and sensitive new biography, Carole Seymour-Jones uncovers the brilliant and beautiful woman who renounced social position to fight for workers and slum dwellers in late-nineteenth-century London; who chose socialism over love and motherhood when she married Sidney Webb; who with Shaw was a founder of Fabian social reform; and who with her husband applauded Soviet communism in its early years. ""Beatrice's story is a very modern one,"" the author writes, because ""it is a story of choices.... She reworked the Victorian feminine ideal of the `angel in the house' to follow her own original path as a social investigator…[and] she paid a heavy price."" Ms. Seymour-Jones has written an intriguing biography with important reverberations for women in our own time. With 8 pages of photographs." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Carole Seymour-JonesPublisher: Ivan R Dee, Inc Imprint: Ivan R Dee, Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.10cm , Height: 3.40cm , Length: 23.70cm Weight: 0.717kg ISBN: 9781566630016ISBN 10: 1566630010 Pages: 383 Publication Date: 01 October 1992 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsShe remains an inexhaustibly fascinating person, partly because of her energy and commitment and partly because her views seem to the modern mind mutually contradictory. The London Times Perceptive and sympathetic. Times Literary Supplement Remarkably good and interesting. London Observer She remains an inexhaustibly fascinating person, partly because of her energy and commitment and partly because her views seem to the modern mind mutually contradictory. The London Times Perceptive and sympathetic. Times Literary Supplement (UK) Remarkably good and interesting. London Observer Author InformationCarole Seymour-Jones studied history at Oxford and was first drawn to Beatrice Webb through her diaries and letters, many of which appear for the first time in this book. Ms. Seymour-Jones lives and writes in England. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |