Margot Finn
professor
Global History and Culture
The University of Warwick
United Kingdom
Biography
Margot is an historian of modern Britain (Britain since 1750), with a predominant focus on the period to 1914. Her previous work has ranged from the history of Victorian popular politics to the gendered legal, social and cultural histories of debt and credit in England. She now researches, teaches and supervises predominantly in topics relating to British colonial and imperial history, with particular emphasis on the family, gender, material culture and transnational encounters. UCL Press will publish a volume of essays (co-edited with Kate Smith) from Margot's Leverhulme Trust-funded research project The East India Company at Home in 2018. Her current monograph project is entitled, 'Imperial Family Formations: Domestic Strategies and Colonial Power in British India, c.1757-1857'.
Research Interest
History of British colonialism and imperialism (c. 1750-1914), and/or the history of gender, race and/or material culture in modern Britain.
Publications
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Finn MC. Family formations: Anglo-India and the familial proto-state. Cambridge University Press.
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Finn M, Smith K. New Paths to Public Histories. Springer; 2015 Sep 17.
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Kowaleski-Wallace E. Consuming subjects: women, shopping, and business in the eighteenth century. Columbia University Press; 1997.