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![]() Dr Hilary HindsSenior Lecturer
County College
Email: Email Hidden AffiliationsResearch InterestsHilary Hinds's principal area of research is in early modern writing, particularly work by women from the radical sects of the second half of the seventeenth century. Her main publications in this area are God's Englishwomen: Seventeenth-Century Radical Sectarian Writing and Feminist Criticism (Manchester University Press, 1996), an edition of the prophet Anna Trapnel's The Cry of a Stone of 1654 (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2000), and the co-edited collection Her Own Life: Autobiographical Writings by Seventeenth-Century Englishwomen (Routledge, 1989). She has also published articles in a number of journals, including Literature and History, Renaissance and Reformation and Quaker Studies. She is now working, with Lancaster colleagues Alison Findlay and Meg Twycross, on a project entitled 'Quakers in North-West England and the Politics of Space, 1652-1653', examining the ways in which early Quakerism emerged from and was shaped by a series of distinctive spatial networks, comprising the landscape, alehouses, marketplaces, mountain-tops, 'steeplehouses', safe houses, and prisons of Lancashire, Westmorland and Cumberland. A pilot version of the website setting out the work of this project can be seen at: http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/english/research/engl_quakers.html This work on early Quakerism will also result in a monograph entitled George Fox and Early Quaker Culture, to be published by Manchester University Press in 2011. In this, she examines the cultural impact of the doctrine of the indwelling Christ on the early Quaker movement. Conceiving of Christ's second coming as having already taken place, since he dwelt within believers such that they were 'flesh of Christ's flesh and bone of his bone', as Fox put it, meant that many of the conventional lines of demarcation between conceptual categories such as the spiritual and the social, masculine and feminine, past and present were dissolved, so that the Quakers dwelt within an almost seamless world of spiritual signification. The monograph investigates the discourses of elision and condensation through which early Quakers shaped, and were shaped by, this perception of the material and spiritual world. Hilary Hinds's other main area of research interest is in twentieth-century women's writing and feminist theory. She is currently working on two interrelated projects: the first concerns the structuring of middlebrow women's fiction in the middle years of the twentieth century (such as the novels of E.M. Delafield, E. Arnot Robertson and Lettice Cooper) through trajectories of disappointment; an article arguing for the constitutive importance of disappointment in the faltering subjectivities of the female protagonists of this fictionappeared in Modern Fiction Studies (2009). Secondly, she is also working on a project which emerged from this study on interwar femininity and disappointment: namely, a cultural history of twin beds. This project investigates the mobilisation of twin beds within discourses of modernity, from their origins in late-nineteenth-century discussions of health and hygiene, to their signifying capacity within debates about marriage and sexuality in the twentieth century. An article resulting from this research, entitled'Together and Apart: Twin Beds, Domestic Hygiene and Modern Marriage, 1890-1945',has been published in the Journal of Design History (2010) 23: 275-304. The article can be viewedhere: http://jdh.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/epq022?ijkey=okMsxy3wzZzS5xT&keytype=ref She has recently been awarded funding for a year'sresearch leave by the Wellcome Trust to undertake the next phase of this project. She would be interested in supervising research projects relating to any of the areas of research interest outlined above. She has supervised to completion PhDs on the following topics:
Hilary Hinds has worked in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University since 2000. Before this, she worked at Cheltenham and Gloucester College of Higher Education (now the University of Gloucestershire), and at Fircroft College of Adult Education, Birmingham. In 1999, she was a Visiting Research Fellow at the Five College Women's Studies Research Center, Mount Holyoke College, USA, and in 2006 at the Centre for Women's and Gender Studies, University of British Columbia, Canada. 2012George FoxHinds, H. 2012 In: The Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature. Stewart, A. & Sullivan, Jr., G. A. (eds.). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, p. 360-364. 5 p. (The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literature). Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary 2011George Fox and Early Quaker CultureHinds, H. 2011 Manchester: Manchester University Press. 215 p. Research output: Book/Report/Proceedings › Book 2010Together and Apart: Domestic Hygiene and Modern Marriage, 1890-1945Hinds, H. 2010 In: Journal of Design History. 23, 3, p. 275-304. 29 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article Sectarian WritingHinds, H. 2010 In: A New Companion to English Renaissance Literature and Culture. Hattaway, M. (ed.). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, Vol. 1, p. 464-477. 13 p. (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture). Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings › Chapter 2009Prophecy and Religious PolemicHinds, H. 2009 In: The Cambridge Companion to Early Modern Women’s Writing. Knoppers, L. (ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 235-246. 11 p. (Cambridge companions to literature). Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings › Chapter Ordinary disappointments: femininity, domesticity and nation in British middlebrow fiction, 1920-1944Hinds, H. 2009 In: Modern Fiction Studies. 55, 2, p. 293-320. 27 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article Domestic Disappointments: Feminine Middlebrow Fiction of the Interwar YearsHinds, H. 07/2009 In: Home Cultures. 6, 2, p. 199-211. 12 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2008“And The Lord’s Power Was Over All”: Calvinist Anxiety, Sacred Confidence, and George Fox’s JournalHinds, H. 2008 In: English Literary History. 75, 4, p. 841-870. 30 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2007Journal of George Fox: A Technology of PresenceHinds, H. & Findlay, A. 2007 In: Quaker Studies. 12, 1, p. 89-106. 18 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article The Paratextual Profusion of Radical Sectarian Women's Writing of the 1640s.Hinds, H. A. 1/08/2007 In: Prose Studies. 29, 2, p. 153 - 177. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2005An absent presence: Quaker narratives of journeys to America and Barbados, 1671-1681.Hinds, H. A. 2005 In: Quaker Studies. 10, 1, p. 6-30. 25 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2004Sectarian Spaces: The Politics of Place and Gender in Seventeenth-Century Prophetic Writing.Hinds, H. A. 1/10/2004 In: Literature and History. 13, 2, p. 1-25. 25 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2003The Routledge Anthology of Renaissance Drama.Barker, S. & Hinds, H. A. 1/01/2003 Research output: Other contribution 2002Anna Trapnel's "Report and plea".Hinds, H. A. 2002 In: The Blackwell companion to early-modern women's writing. Pacheco, A. (ed.). Oxford: Blackwell, p. 177-188. 12 p. Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings › Chapter 2001Soul-Ravishing and Sin-Subduing: Anna Trapnel and the Gendered Politics of Free Grace.Hinds, H. A. 1/10/2001 In: Renaissance and Reformation. Special issue: 'Literature and Religion in Early Modern England: Case Studies'. 25, 4, p. 117-137. 21 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article Imaging Feminism, Imaging Femininity: The Bra-Burner, Diana, and the Woman Who Kills.Hinds, H. & Stacey, J. 2001 In: Feminist Media Studies. 1, 2, p. 153-177. 25 p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article 2000The Undeveloped Heart: Forster, Pym and the English South.Hinds, H. 2000 In: Devolving identities: feminist readings in home and belonging. Pearce, L. (ed.). v.8 ed. Aldershot: Ashgate, p. 241-257. 17 p. (Studies in European cultural transition). Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings › Chapter The cry of a stone / by Anna Trapnel.Hinds, H. 2000 Arizona: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. 123 p. (Medieval and Renaissance texts and studies). Research output: Book/Report/Proceedings › Book
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