Ann Oakley

Standard Name: Oakley, Ann
Birth Name: Ann Titmuss
Pseudonym: Rosamund Clay
Married Name: Ann Oakley
Ann Oakley is one of the most influential feminist voices of twentieth-century English sociology. She has worked primarily on the life-experiences which differentiate women from men, like housework, child-bearing, and the operation of gender in the family. She has edited broader collections of essays reflecting on the travails and achievements of the women's movement, and has commented trenchantly on medical culture, the workings of the welfare state, and the epistemology of knowledge in the social sciences. She has also written autobiography, family memoir, novels, and many articles in academic and non-academic journals.

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Texts

Oakley, Ann, and A. Susan Williams, editors. The Politics of the Welfare State. UCL Press, 1994.
Oakley, Ann, and Juliet Mitchell, editors. The Rights and Wrongs of Women. Penguin, 1976.
Oakley, Ann. The Secret Lives of Eleanor Jenkinson. HarperCollins, 1992.
Oakley, Ann. The Sociology of Housework. Martin Robinson, 1974.
Williams, Fiona et al., editors. Welfare Research: A Critical Review. UCL Press, 1999.
Oakley, Ann, and Juliet Mitchell, editors. What is Feminism?. Blackwell, 1986.
Oakley, Ann, and Juliet Mitchell, editors. Who’s Afraid of Feminism? Seeing through the Backlash. Hamish Hamilton, 1997.
Oakley, Ann. Women Confined. Martin Robinson, 1980.