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  1. 23 de mai. de 2018 · Catherine Hall is Emerita Professor of History and Chair of the Centre for the Study of British Slave-ownership at University College London. Her recent work has focused on the relation between Britain and its empire: Civilising Subjects (2002), Macaulay and Son (2012) and Hall et al., Legacies of British Slave-ownership (2014).

  2. 12 de jul. de 2016 · Catherine Hall is Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History at University College London. Since her pioneering work Family Fortunes: men and women of the English middle class, 1750-1850 (1987), she has sought to resituate constitutive categories of class, gender, and race as being central to narratives of Britain, especially in re-thinking the relation between Britain and its empire.

  3. A Catharine Hill É Brasileira. Fundada em 1982 com o objetivo de elevar o patamar das maquiagens brasileiras a níveis internacionais. Qualidade Profissional. Sinônimo de qualidade profissional em maquiagem com produtos resistentes de excelência comprovada. Conheça mais a Catharine Hill. Saiba mais. Conheça mais a Catharine Hill.

  4. This jewel of a novel is a smooth and engaging read…about murder, mystery, and friendship. And complicated relationships. And the paranormal. It’s also about change, growth, and the power of love…Catherine C. Hall is a master, making this multi-textured cozy one of the best you’ll ever read. Lisa Ricard Claro, Author SECRETS LAID TO REST.

  5. Catherine Hall’s analysis of the hostility in the ‘mother country’ to the arrival and settlement of ‘coloured colonials’ makes occasional reference to migrants’ experience in port cities in the decades before the arrival of the Empire Windrush in 1948 (LRB, 23 January).

  6. 27 de ago. de 2014 · Catherine Hall, Nicholas Draper, Keith McClelland, Rachel Lang and Kate Donington, Legacies of British Slave-ownership: Colonial Slavery and the Formation of Victorian Britain, Cambridge, 2014 forthcoming.

  7. In Civilising Subjects, Catherine Hall argues that the idea of empire was at the heart of mid-nineteenth-century British self-imagining, with peoples such as the “Aborigines” in Australia and the “negroes” in Jamaica serving as markers of difference separating “civilised” English from “savage” others. Hall uses the stories of ...