Leonie Hannan
Search for other papers by Leonie Hannan in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

Taking place during multiple lockdowns and in an era of existential crisis, the process of writing this book has been fraught. Nonetheless, the strange influences of this time, both intensely domestic and devastatingly global, have made me think and rethink the home as a space of work and thought. Lacking the tacit knowledge of my book’s subjects, I made very little serviceable sourdough, but I often contemplated the affective, intellectual and practical concerns engendered by the home, its temporal patterns and its regimes of labour. The book would not have materialised if it were not for the solid help and encouragement of many people.

Often beamed in from their own domestic spaces, friends and collaborators have been crucial to this project, in particular: Ananay Aguilar, Polly Bull, Gemma Carney, Helen Chatterjee, Sarah Longair, Catriona McKenzie, Kate Smith and Caroline Sumpter. I have had the good fortune to think with these people over many years. I have a long-term debt to Mat Paskins for helping me to see things in new and enlivening ways.

As a work of archival research, I am obliged to very many institutions and individuals but am particularly grateful for the kind support of Evelyn Watson at the Royal Society of Arts and also for Anton Howes’ insights into this collection. Early on in the research, I was a visiting scholar at the Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library in Delaware, USA and benefitted from the expertise of their curators including the late and great Linda Eaton. As the manuscript neared completion, I was fortunate to secure a fellowship with the Descartes Center at the University of Utrecht, Netherlands and hugely valued the collegiality of Marjolijn Bol, Sven Dupré, Marieke Hendriksen, Grace Kim-Butler and Henrike Scholten. Over many years and in several jurisdictions, I have been fortunate to meet with generous opening hours and knowledgeable support in a multitude of archives. This book would not be one about Ireland if it weren’t for the assistance of a historian of incredible talent, Ruth Thorpe, who foraged in archives when I could not.

Particular thanks go to those kind people who looked at drafts: Penelope Corfield, Kate Smith, Caroline Sumpter and the three anonymous readers. It has been a pleasure to work with the Manchester University Press team. I am also grateful to Cultural and Social History and Bloomsbury Academic for giving their permission to reproduce aspects of my work published in their volumes.

As with all large projects, this would not have been any fun without friends and family, especially Evi Chatzipanagiotidou, Becky Fishley, Julie Mathias, Sally Smith, Liza Thompson, the Hannans and my ‘secret garden’ neighbours. Very many trade unionists have made the increasingly troubled environment of higher education bearable, for the present and – I hope – the future. I am most grateful to Véronique Altglas for her friendship and comradeship. I wouldn’t have embarked on this subject without long walks and interesting discussions with Joey O’Gorman.

Researched during a period when I began to wonder about parenthood and written after the fact, this book is dedicated to Aphra.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

A culture of curiosity

Science in the eighteenth-century home

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 0 0 0
Full Text Views 106 29 0
PDF Downloads 70 21 2