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.

Milestones

17 January 1944

Ann Titmuss (later AO ) was born in the Lindo wing of St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, days before a mini-blitz of bombing began.
Oakley, Ann. Man and Wife: Richard and Kay Titmuss: My Parents’ Early Years. HarperCollins.
222
Oakley, Ann. Taking It like a Woman. Flamingo.
8

February 1972

While still writing her PhD thesis on housework, AO published Sex, Gender and Society, a deeply indignant social document, written in six weeks during a university vacation.
British Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons.
1973
Oakley, Ann. Taking It like a Woman. Flamingo.
125

23 June 1988

The Men's Room, AO 's first novel to see print, appeared from Virago Press.
Blackwell’s Online Bookshop. http://Bookshop.Blackwell.co.uk.
Oakley, Ann. The Men’s Room. Virago.
title-page

Biography

Birth and Family

17 January 1944

Ann Titmuss (later AO ) was born in the Lindo wing of St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, days before a mini-blitz of bombing began.
Oakley, Ann. Man and Wife: Richard and Kay Titmuss: My Parents’ Early Years. HarperCollins.
222
Oakley, Ann. Taking It like a Woman. Flamingo.
8