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  1. Katharine Susan Anthony, sometimes also spelled Katherine (November 27, 1877 – November 20, 1965), was a US biographer best known for The Lambs (1945), a controversial study of the British writers Charles and Mary Lamb.

  2. Katharine Anthony was an American biographer best known for The Lambs (1945), a controversial study of the British writers Charles and Mary Lamb. The greater portion of her work examined the lives of notable American women. A college teacher of geometry, Anthony was deeply interested in psychiatry.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 16 de jun. de 2023 · Katharine Susan Anthony was suffragist, feminist, pacifist, socialist, and author of feminist and psychological biographies of famous women. Born in Arkansas, she lived and worked as a successful author in Greenwich Village, New York, for more than fifty-five years.

  4. Now, in the media-characterized social welfare work, the theories that Anthony had studied on "postfeminist" 1980s, we may learn from Anthony, her time, the cause and prevention of poverty and class and sex inequities and her choices, as we too face an unfriendly, reactionary became realities.

  5. One of his Quaker sons fought with John Brown at Osawatomie. Susan was born on February 15,1820, in Adams, Massachusetts, and grew up in America’s first great period of social reform. She was, as Katherine Anthony’s account shows at length, her father’s daughter.

  6. Anthony, Katharine Susan (1877–1965) American writer and feminist. Born Katharine Susan Anthony in Roseville, Arkansas, on November 27, 1877; died in 1965; daughter of Ernest Augustus Anthony (brother of suffragist Susan B. Anthony) and Susan Jane (Cathey) Anthony; niece of Susan B. Anthony; attended Peabody College for Teachers in Nashville, ...

  7. Féminisme Oblige examines the life and work of Katharine Susan Anthony (1877-1965), a feminist, socialist, and pacifist whose early publications on working mothers (Mothers Who Must Earn [1914]) and women’s movements in Europe (Feminism in Germany and Scandinavia [1915]) presaged