Copyright

Leslie Howsam

Published On

2024-03-08

Page Range

pp. 1–8

Language

  • English

Print Length

8 pages

Prologue

Such is Eliza Orme’s identity—a woman academically trained in law at a time when the discipline’s professional credentials were categorically closed to women—that she was quite well known in her own time and place, late-Victorian London, but has been largely overlooked by posterity despite our ongoing fascination with women’s struggle for equal rights. Miss Orme was ‘hopelessly practical’, as she once told a political audience, but she was also remarkably ambitious. Research in private letters and published accounts reveals her as sarcastic and witty, warm and teasing, blunt and authoritative. Historian Leslie Howsam chooses the genre of ‘research memoir’ to capture key elements of this elusive subject’s life and work while demonstrating how digital resources and methods, increasingly available over four decades of her own career, have transformed the investigation.

Contributors

Leslie Howsam

(author)
Emerita Distinguished University Professor at University of Windsor
Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Digital Humanities at Toronto Metropolitan University

Leslie Howsam is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and Emerita Distinguished University Professor at the University of Windsor (as well as Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Digital Humanities at Toronto Metropolitan University). Her most recent book is the Cambridge Companion to the History of the Book (2015); her best-known book is Old Books & New Histories: An Orientation to Studies in Book and Print Culture (2006). For further information please see https://lesliehowsam.ca