People

Dr Amanda Flather

Visiting Fellow
Department of History
Dr Amanda Flather
  • Email

  • Location

    Colchester Campus

  • Academic support hours

    My academic support hours in the summer term are Wednesdays 11am to 1pm. Please email and we can arrange to talk if necessary by phone or zoom. If these times are not convenient just email and I can arrange another appointment.

Profile

Biography

I always loved everything to do with history - at school, in films, books and on TV. I tried other careers but my fascination with the subject never dimmed and so I decided to go back to study history at University. I am really intrigued by the details of daily life. They give you a way in to understanding a different mental world as well as insights into larger questions about family, power and gender. I studied history at the University of Essex where I completed my doctorate in 2002. My first book, Gender and Space in Early Modern England, which was published in 2007, is an attempt to explore the influence of gender on the use and organisation of space amongst early modern English men and women below the level of the elite. I was awarded the John Nichols Prize in English Local History by the University of Leicester in 1998, and have published on the organisation of sacred space; the influence of gender on the organisation and use of the market place; gender and religious violence in early modern England; the sexual division of labour, and the experience and use of domestic space by male and female servants. My research broadly addresses the social and cultural history of early modern England within the context of local society. To date, my work has focused principally on gender relations, with particular emphasis on the history of the organisation of social space in England between the mid-sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Research interests also include micro-history, individual agency, religious culture, material culture. My approach to the study of history is interdisciplinary, employing methodologies from anthropology, geography and sociology. I also have a research interest in how my subject is taught. I am a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and in 2012-3 was the University of Essex representative in the research team of three for the Higher Education Academy funded Bridges to History and Employment project on transition, retention and course-located skills. Previous supervision topics Representations of Single Women in Post-Reformation England Gentry households: spatial codes, constructed identities and the 'real' experience of the gentry household during the early 18th century. Clerical masculinity in early modern England Clothing culture in early modern Essex. Pugs and Patrons: A History of Bare-knuckle Prize-fighting from Broughton to Sayers. Representations of Gender in the 1641 Irish rebellion Marriage a la Mode? Courtship, Contracts and Control: The Making of the Eighteenth Century Parentally Arranged Aristocratic Marriage Plebeian Honour Fights in Eighteenth Century London: a study of masculinity and violence A cultural history of male violence: a history of boxingfrom the early eighteenth to the later nineteenth century

Qualifications

  • PhD

  • Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy

Research and professional activities

Research interests

the organisation of social space

Open to supervise

material culture

Open to supervise

gender and sexuality

Open to supervise

any aspect of the social and cultural history of early modern England

Open to supervise

Current research

Male servants, masculinity and work identity.

Sacred space and material culture 1600-1642.

A Cultural History of the Home.

Conferences and presentations

Gender, Ritual and Revolution: A Comparative Regional Study in Early Modern England at: Seventeenth-Century England.

Invited presentation, Seventeenth-Century England: A Symposium in Celebration of Bernard Capp’s 50 Years at Warwick. October 2018, Warwick, United Kingdom, 20/10/2018

Women, work and land: the spatial dynamics of gender relations in early modern England 1550-1750, Women, Land and the Making of the British Landscape (Hull, 2015).

Hull, United Kingdom, 2015

Domestic Space: A Methodological Framework, Rural servants: comparisons and contrasts, EURHO Rural History Conference (Girona, 2015).

Girona, Italy, 2015

Early modern Gender and space: some methodological approaches. Keynote address. University of Granada, Houses, Homes and Households in Early Modern Europe, International three-day symposium. (2014).

Granada, Spain, 2014

Gender, Space and Place: The Experience of Service in the Early Modern Rural Household, Symposium on Servants and Domestic Workers in Europe XV1th X1Xth centuries: Regional Diversity and Forms of Dependence at the Centre de Recherches Historiques, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (París,2014).

2014

Gender, agency and religious change in early modern England, Popular Culture and Political Agency in Early Modern England and Ireland (Sheffield,2014).

Sheffield, United Kingdom, 2014

'The influence of gender on the use and organisation of sacred space in early modern England c. 1580-1640. LS London School of Economics. Seminar series: The Uses of Space in Early Modern History 1580-1850. (2012).

London, United Kingdom, 2012

Gender, space and place: the experience of service in the early modern household' c. 1580-1720. University of Oxford Brookes: Early Modern Women. One day inter-disciplinary symposium. Space, Place and Gender: The Sexual and Spatial Division of Labour in the Early Modern Household. Roehampton University. From Space to Place: the Spatial Dimension in the History of Western Europe. Two-day international and interdisciplinary conference (2010).

Wandsworth, United Kingdom, 2010

Gender, space and place: the experience of service in the early modern Household 1580-1720. University of Manchester in partnership with the Geffrye Museum: Histories of the Home subject specialist network: Home-Work Work in and at home from the sixteenth century to the present day. Two day inter-disciplinary symposium (2009).

Manchester, United Kingdom, 2009

Teaching and supervision

Current teaching responsibilities

  • Modern Revolutions in Science, Politics, and Culture (CS101)

  • Interdisciplinary Research and Problem-Solving: An Introduction (CS111)

Previous supervision

Stephen Dickens
Stephen Dickens
Thesis title: Old Age, Poverty and Gender in Rural England: A Case Study of Suffolk 1750-1834
Degree subject: History
Degree type: Doctor of Philosophy
Awarded date: 29/11/2023
Michael Gary Sewell
Michael Gary Sewell
Thesis title: Uses of the History of the British Civil Wars in Colchester in the Long Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century with Special Reference to the Siege of Colchester in 1648
Degree subject: History
Degree type: Doctor of Philosophy
Awarded date: 10/10/2022
Mark Brian Walker
Mark Brian Walker
Thesis title: The 'Melancholy Pompous Sight': Royal Deaths and the Politics of Ritual in the Late Stuart Monarchy, C. 1685-1714
Degree subject: History
Degree type: Doctor of Philosophy
Awarded date: 15/3/2016

Publications

Journal articles (4)

Flather, A., (2021). The Organization and Use of Household Space for Work in Early Modern England: 1550–1750. European History Quarterly. 51 (4), 480-503

Flather, A., (2017). Gender, Space and Place: The Experience of Servants in Rural Households 1550-1750. Mundo Agrario. 18 (39), 066-066

FLATHER, AJ., (2013). 3. SPACE, PLACE, AND GENDER: THE SEXUAL AND SPATIAL DIVISION OF LABOR IN THE EARLY MODERN HOUSEHOLD. History and Theory. 52 (3), 344-360

Flather, A., (2011). Gender, Space, and Place: The Experience of Service in the Early Modern English Household c.1580?1720. Home cultures.. 8 (2), 171-188

Books (2)

Flather, A., Tankard, D., Wall, C., Richardson, C., Whittle, J., Hamling, T., Hohti Erichson, P. and Begiato, J., (2020). A Cultural History of the Home in the Renaissance.. Bloomsbury Academic. 978-1-4725-8424-3

Flather, A., (2007). Gender and Space in Early Modern England. Royal Historical Society/Boydell Press. 9780861932863

Book chapters (7)

Flather, A., (2020). Introduction. In: A Cultural History of The Home in the Renaissance. Bloomsbury Academic. 1- 12. 978-1-4725-8424-3

Flather, A., (2020). Gender and Home. In: A cultural History of Home in the Renaissance. Bloomsbury Academic. 127- 147. 978-1-4725-8424-3

Flather, A., (2019). Women, Work and Land: The Spatial Dynamics of Gender Relations in Early Modern England 1550–1750. In: Women and the Land, 1500-1900. Editors: Capern, A., Mcdonagh, B. and Aston, J., . Boydell Press. 9781783273980

Flather, A., (2017). Gender, agency and religious change in early Stuart England. In: Popular Culture and Political Agency in Early Modern England and Ireland Essays in Honour of John Walter. Editors: Braddick, MJ. and Withington, P., . Boydell and Brewer. 9781783271719

Flather, A., (2017). Male Servants, Identity and Urban Space in Eighteenth-Century England. In: The Routledge History Handbook of Gender and the Urban Experience. Editors: Simonton, D., . Routledge. 91- 102. 9781138815940

Flather, A., (2015). Gender and the Organization of Sacred Space in Early Modern England c1580-1640. In: The Uses of Space in Early Modern History. Editors: Stock, P., . Palgrave Macmillan. 43- 74. 9781137490032

Flather, A., (2013). Gender and the Control of Sacred Space in Early Modern England. In: Women, Agency and the Law, 1300?1700. Editors: Kane, B. and Williamson, F., . Routledge. 99- 112. 9781848933842

Contact

flatak@essex.ac.uk

Location:

Colchester Campus

Academic support hours:

My academic support hours in the summer term are Wednesdays 11am to 1pm. Please email and we can arrange to talk if necessary by phone or zoom. If these times are not convenient just email and I can arrange another appointment.