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7 Politics woven as missionary craft
The carpets of the White Fathers and Sisters from the 1920s
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of figures vii
- List of contributors xi
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Introduction 1
- 1 Literary visions of craft and cooperation in the European handmade lace revival, c. 1840–1914 25
- 2 Work of hands 55
- 3 Thinking Anglo-American industrial relief through Armenian needlework in the late 1890s 75
- 4 Emily Hobhouse and the Koppies Lace School, 1908–1926 97
- 5 Beyond gratitude 119
- 6 Threads of friendship 140
- 7 Politics woven as missionary craft 159
- 8 Caught in the net 182
- 9 Crafting communist paternalism 206
- 10 Humanitarian handicrafts as (dis)empowerment of women ‘left behind’ 224
- 11 Humanitarian handicrafts 254
- Afterword 269
- Index 279
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of figures vii
- List of contributors xi
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Introduction 1
- 1 Literary visions of craft and cooperation in the European handmade lace revival, c. 1840–1914 25
- 2 Work of hands 55
- 3 Thinking Anglo-American industrial relief through Armenian needlework in the late 1890s 75
- 4 Emily Hobhouse and the Koppies Lace School, 1908–1926 97
- 5 Beyond gratitude 119
- 6 Threads of friendship 140
- 7 Politics woven as missionary craft 159
- 8 Caught in the net 182
- 9 Crafting communist paternalism 206
- 10 Humanitarian handicrafts as (dis)empowerment of women ‘left behind’ 224
- 11 Humanitarian handicrafts 254
- Afterword 269
- Index 279