Professor Julie Gottlieb
B.A. (McGill), M.A., Ph.D. (Cambridge)
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Professor of Modern History
Impact Lead
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+44 114 222 2606
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
Sheffield
S3 7RA
- Profile
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I am a Professor of Modern History. I completed a Joint Honours BA in English and History at McGill University (Montreal) before coming to Britain where I completed an MPhil and a PhD at the University of Cambridge. After my studies at Cambridge, I was a lecturer at the University of Manchester and at Bristol University, before starting at Sheffield in September 2003. I have held fellowships and been guest professorships at univerisities in France, Hungary, Slovenia, Canada and the USA.
- Qualifications
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PhD in History, University of Cambridge MPhil
University of Cambridge
Joint Honours BA in English and History, McGill University
- Research interests
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My research interests are, broadly in:
- Modern British political history (principally the period 1918 to 1945) the history of political extremism (with a focus on right-wing extremism in Britain)
- women's history and gender studies (particularly women in politics, the construction of gender identities in the political sphere, and women in the Conservative Party)
- comparative fascism (particularly gender and fascism in comparative perspective)
- Race and identity in the British context
- the Medical Humanities, mental health, and the history of suicide
My second monograph examines women's participation and their representation in British foreign affairs between the wars; women's political activism in a range of internationalist, feminist and pacifist organizations; women’s contribution to resistance to fascism at home and abroad; and the gendering of the appeasement in the late 1930s. "Guilty Women: Gender, Foreign Policy and Appeasement in inter-war Britain" was published in 2015 and became available in paperback in 2017.
Emerging from 'Guilty Women', I carried on researching the intersecting themes of women's political engagement in domestic and foreign affairs, alongside the history of below of the international crises of the 1930s.
Recent collaborative publications, all stemming from international conferences, include Rethinking Right-wing Women: Gender and the Conservative Party 1880s to the Present (2017); a special issue of Diplomacy & Statecraft as well as a Routledge edition Gendering Peace in Europe c.1880-2000 (co-edited with Gaynor Johnson); the collected volume The Munich Crisis, Politics and the People (co-edited with Daniel Hucker and Richard Toye); and Women on the Right: Politics and Social Action in Comparative and Transnational Perspective, 1870s-1990s (co-edited with Clarisse Berthezène and Laura Lee Downs).
Ongoing research projects focus on women's politicisation in Modern Britain; people's histories of international crises; and the emotional and psychological fallout of the Munich crisis, stemming from my Wellcome Seed Award-funded project "Suicide, Society and Crisis" (2017-19). I am completing a new mongraph with writer Nicola Baldwin titled "The Nervous State: F.L. Lucas and the Internalisation of Crisis, 1938 (White Rose University Press).
- Publications
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- Books
- Edited books
- Journal articles
- Chapters
- Book reviews
- Conference proceedings papers
- Website content
- Dictionary/encyclopaedia entries
- Other
Books
- Introduction. Manchester University Press.
- ‘Guilty Women’, Foreign Policy, and Appeasement in Inter-War Britain. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Edited books
- The Aftermath of Suffrage. Palgrave Macmillan UK.
Journal articles
- Gendering Peace in Europe. Diplomacy & Statecraft, 31(4), 601-608.
- The Iron Ladies revisited. Women's History Review, 28(2), 337-349.
- Considering conservative women in the gendering of modern British politics. Women's History Review, 28(2), 189-193.
- View this article in WRRO
- View this article in WRRO
- View this article in WRRO
- Peace at any Price: the Visit of Nazi Women's Leader Gertrud Scholtz-Klink to London in March 1939 and the Response of British Women Activists. Women's History Review, 1-22.
- Neville Chamberlain's Umbreall: 'Object' Lessons in the History of Appeasement. Twentieth Century British History, 27(3), 357-388. View this article in WRRO
- Karina Urbach, Go-Betweens for Hitler. Journal of Contemporary History, 51(3), 701-702.
- The Women's Movement Took the Wrong Turning: British feminists, pacifism and the politics of appeasement. Women's History Review, 23(3), 441-462.
- Introduction: Flour power and feminism between the waves. Women's History Review, 23(3), 325-329.
- ‘Broken Friendships and Vanished Loyalties’: Gender, Collective (In)Security and Anti-Fascism in Britain in the 1930s. Politics, Religion and Ideology, 13(3), 197-219.
- Introduction. Politics, Religion & Ideology, 13(2), 137-140.
- Body Fascism in Britain: Building the Blackshirt in the Inter-War Period. Contemporary European History, 20(2), 111-136.
- Nazis in Pre-War London, 1930-1939: The Fate and Role of German Party Members and British Sympathisers. EUR HIST Q, 39(2), 315-316.
- Book Reviews. Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 8(1), 163-197.
- The Marketing of Megalomania: Celebrity, Consumption and the Development of Political Technology in the British Union of Fascists. Journal of Contemporary History, 41(1), 35-55.
- The Germanic Isle: Nazi Perceptions of Britain, by Gerwin Strobl. Canadian Journal of History, 37(3), 561-563.
- Feminist Freikorps: The British Voluntary Women Police, 1914-1940, by R. M. Douglas. Canadian Journal of History, 37(2), 389-391.
- ‘Motherly Hate’: Gendering Anti–Semitism in the British Union of Fascists. Gender & History, 14(2), 294-320.
- Reviews. Twentieth Century British History, 12(2), 262-266.
- An Epidemic of Nervous Breakdowns and Crisis Suicides in Britain’s War of Nerves, 1938–1940. The Historical Journal, 1-24.
Dan Stone .Breeding Superman: Nietzsche, Race and Eugenics in Edwardian and Interwar Britain . (Studies in Social and Political Thought.) Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. 2002. Pp. x, 197. $52.95. The American Historical Review.
Chapters
- 2.4.3 Inequalities in Contemporary History (c. 1900–2000), The European Experience (pp. 251-260). Open Book Publishers
- Inequalities in Contemporary History (c. 1900-2000), The European Experience: A Multi-Perspective History of Modern Europe (pp. 251-259).
- Introduction, Considering Conservative Women in the Gendering of Modern British Politics (pp. 1-5). Routledge
- ‘We Were Done the Moment We Gave Women the Vote’: The Female Franchise Factor and the Munich By-elections, 1938–1939, The Aftermath of Suffrage (pp. 159-180). Palgrave Macmillan UK
- Varieties of Anti-Fascism Palgrave Macmillan UK
- Feminism and Anti-fascism in Britain: Militancy Revived?, British Fascism, the Labour Movement and the State (pp. 68-94). Palgrave Macmillan UK
Book reviews
- Red Ellen: The Life and Ellen Wilkinson, Socialist, Feminist, Internationalist. By Laura Beers. Twentieth Century British History, 29(3), 487-489.
- Women of the World: the rise of the female diplomatHELEN McCARTHY. Women's History Review, 24(4), 653-654.
- R. Gerald Hughes. The Postwar Legacy of Appeasement: British Foreign Policy since 1945. London: Bloomsbury, 2014. Pp. 331. £20.69 (paperback).. Journal of British Studies, 54(2), 527-528.
- Women’s International Thought: A New History. Global Intellectual History, 1-3.
Conference proceedings papers
Website content
Dictionary/encyclopaedia entries
- Chamberlain, Annie Vere [Anne] (1882–1967), political wife Oxford University Press.
Other
- Research group
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Research Supervision
- Current Students
Second Supervisor
- Completed Students
- Vernon Jones - Improving the Social and Working Conditions of Miners 1920-1946: The Contribution of the Miners' Welfare Fund
- Cherie Prosser - BEYOND NATIONALISM: Profression to Modernism in propaganda posters 1914-1918
- Isabelle Carter (second supervisor) - The lived experience of post-war multi-storey council housing: reassessing Sheffield's Park Hill and Manchester's Hulme.
- Liam Liburd - The Eternal Imperialists: Empire, Race and Gender on the British Radical Right, 1918-1968.
- David Page (MPhil) - Pioneers of European Federalism: the New Europe Group and New Britain Movement (1931–1935).
- Sarah Kenny (second supervisor) - Unspectacular Youth? Evening Leisure Space and Young Culture in Sheffield c.1960-1989.
- Ross Paulger (MPhil, second supervisor) - Anglo-American Quality Press Narratives and Sexual Revolution, 1958-1979.
- Steven McKevitt (second supervisor) - The Persuasion Industries in the UK and the Inculcation of Persuasion within British Society from 1969 to 1997.
- Lucy Brown (second supervisor) - Encountering Each Other: Love and Emotional Relationships Between Men and Women in Britain, 1950s-1970s.
- Teaching interests
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Modern British History, Fascism, Internationalism, Women and Gender.
- Teaching activities
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Undergraduate:
- HST119 - The Transformation of Britain, 1800 to Present
- HST2030 - Appeasement, the Munich Crisis and the British People
- HST2091/2 - Course Assignment
- HST276 - Gender and Sexuality in Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
- HST3069/70 - Facism and Anti-Facism in Britain 1923-1945
Postgraduate:
- HST6046 - Sex and Power: The Politics of Women’s Liberation in Modern Britain
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Royal Historical Society - Member
- Women's History Review - Editorial Board
- The Aftermath of War (a AHRC-funded network) - Steering Committee
- AHRC Peer Review College - Member
Administrative roles:
Beginning in 2017, I took over as chair of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities Equality and Diversity Committee, and I am a member of the Women@TUoS NETwork standing Development Committee. I organised a number of events to raise awareness of FEDIC priorities and concerns including:
- Tackling Implicit Bias with Professor Jenny Saul (video resource)
- The future of gender in the curriculum with Professor Andrea Pető (video resource)
- Women in leadership (read more about the event)
Department of History Exams Officer 2016-17.
I have previously been on Research Committee, Teaching Committee and Postgraduate Committee. In 2011, I chaired the Level I Teaching Sub-Committee to lead reform of our curriculum by integrating research-driven teaching at level I, and this committee designed the first version of "The History Workshop", an innovative module adopted by the Department in 2013-14.
I have been Level II Tutor, a student-centred role, in which I introduced new time-efficient, rationalized procedures. I have also served as Course Assignment Coordinator, and CILASS representative, responsible for developing CILASS workshops, and responding to student concerns.
- Public engagement
Since 2022, I have been working in close collaboration with writer-filmmaker Nicola Baldwin on "The Nervous State" [view the 4 films on the Sheffield Player]. The pedagogical strand of this project has produced curriculum material hosted by the Historical Association. , and policy work on embedding emotional literacy within the history curriculum with the Schools History Project.
I have shared my research through public engagement activities in the wider community, speaking to schools, through arts projects, and in the media. Especially since the summer 2016, I have been in the media, offering historical contextualisation for the fallout of the EU referendum, the feminisation of British politics and the ascendency of women in Conservative and Right-wing politics, and the impact of political crisis on mental health (individually and collectively).
I have reached regional, national, and international audiences on radio and television, including BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour, The Sunday Politics, and Sky News, and interviewed by a number of news outlets, including the Times, Atlantic Monthly, the Yorkshire Post, BBC Magazine, the New York Times, the Newstatesman, and Kristeligt Dagblad. I have written for publications with wide readerships, like BBC History Magazine and History Today, recorded many podcasts, and contributed to First News to interest children in the links between the news and history. The Newstatesman, The Huffington Post, The Conversation, History Matters, and The PSA Political Insight.
In Sheffield I have appeared a number of times on BBC Radio Sheffield, spoken to a variety of local groups about aspects of my research, acted as historical consultant to Coralie Turpin for the artist’s vibrant mosaic installation at Anne Knight House, and curated the Suffrage 100 strand of the Off the Shelf Festival of Words in October 2018 OTS 2018 3.indd .
I have found my active collaboration with Freddie Garland, dancer-choreographer of the Tenfoot Dance Company, especially enriching in the creation of the multifaceted and multimedia community dance project “Angels of the North: Women’s Movement 100”, phases of which have been performed at Ideas Alive and Festival of the Mind. [link to YouTube video will be available soon] You can see my impact case study for the Department of History REF 2014 and REF 2021.
I was a historical adviser to the statue of suffragist Millicent Fawcett, unveiled in the spring 2018. Following the Vote 100 celebrations on 6 February, she shared her experience of the project and her research in the interview: Why does the Vote 100 centenary matter?. To find about more about the Fawcett statue and the unveiling event, see here.
In May 2018 our Wellome-funded Conference – Suicide, Society and Crisis brought together scholars, practicioners and community activists. You can hear from a number of the participants here Suicide, society, crisis (academic conference) In June 2018 our conference The Munich Crisis and the People brought together researchers interested to use fresh approaches and offer new perspectives on the familiar story of the international crisis and appeasement in 1938.
In February 2020 I joined a panel organised by Dr Karina Urbach at the IAS, Princeton, considering the Impact of the Past: Antisemitism Past and Present. You can watch the discussion here Anti-Semitism—Past and Present.