Catherine Bishop
Contact category | Researcher (past) |
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Research outputs
The serendipity of connectivity: Piecing together women's lives in the digital archive
Bishop, Catherine. (2017). The serendipity of connectivity: Piecing together women's lives in the digital archive. Women's History Review. 26(5), pp. 766 - 780. https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166883Journal article
Business and politics as women's work: The Australian colonies and the mid-nineteenth-century women's movement
Bishop, Catherine and Woollacott, Angela. (2016). Business and politics as women's work: The Australian colonies and the mid-nineteenth-century women's movement. Journal of Women's History. 28(1), pp. 84 - 106. https://doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2016.0006Journal article
When your money is not your own : Coverture and married women in business in colonial New South Wales
Bishop, Catherine. (2015). When your money is not your own : Coverture and married women in business in colonial New South Wales. Law and History Review. 33(1), pp. 181 - 200. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248014000510Journal article
Spinks Cottage: Heritage, history and use
Bishop, Catherine. (2015). Spinks Cottage: Heritage, history and use. In In A. Cooper, L. Paterson and A. Wanhalla (Ed.). The lives of colonial objects pp. 72 - 77 Otago University Press.Book chapter
Explorer memory and Aboriginal celebrity
Bishop, Catherine and White, Richard. (2015). Explorer memory and Aboriginal celebrity. In In Shino Konishi, Maria Nugent and Tiffany Shellam (Ed.). pp. 31 - 66 Australian National University Press.Book chapter
Women on the move : Gender, money-making and mobility in mid-ninteenth-century Australasia
Bishop, Catherine. (2014). Women on the move : Gender, money-making and mobility in mid-ninteenth-century Australasia. History Australia. 11(2), pp. 38 - 59.Journal article
A virtual walk down Pitt Street in 1858: Uncovering the Hidden Women Workers of Colonial Sydney
Bishop, Catherine. (2011). A virtual walk down Pitt Street in 1858: Uncovering the Hidden Women Workers of Colonial Sydney. In M. Nolan (Ed.). National Labour History Conference (NLHC). Australia: Australian National University Press. pp. 116 - 143Conference item
She Has the Native Interests Too Much at Heart Annie Lock's Experiences as a Single, White, Female Missionary to Aborigines 1903-1937
Bishop, Catherine. (2008). She Has the Native Interests Too Much at Heart Annie Lock's Experiences as a Single, White, Female Missionary to Aborigines 1903-1937. In Evangelists of Empire? Missionaries in Colonial History pp. 229 - 244 Melbourne University Press.Book chapter
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