Rosalind Coward

Rosalind Coward
Born United Kingdom
Website [<span%20class="url">.roscoward.com www.roscoward.com%20www<wbr/>.roscoward<wbr/>.com]</span>]
Academic background
Alma mater University of Greenwich
Thesis title The patriarchal theory: some modes of explanation of kinship in the social sciences
Thesis url https://www.worldcat.org/title/patriarchal-theory-some-modes-of-explanation-of-kinship-in-the-social-sciences/oclc/847541431
Thesis year 1981
Academic work
Institutions Roehampton University
Main interests Journalism
Notable works "This Novel Changes Lives": Are Women's Novels Feminist Novels?
Notable ideas Feminist issues and cultural semiotics

Rosalind Coward (also known as Ros Coward) is professor of journalism at Roehampton University, and the former director of Greenpeace UK (2005-12).[1] journalist [2] and writer.

Education

Cowrd gained her PhD from the University of Greenwich in 1981.[3]

Career

She has been a columnist for The Guardian[4] from 1992 and was previously a regular contributor to The Observer and Marxism Today. She wrote a regular column for The Guardian's Comment pages between 1995 and 2004. From 2005-2008 she was the author of the regular "Looking After Mother" column for the Saturday Guardian's Family section, about the problems faced by those caring for people with dementia.[5]

Her career in journalism includes feature writing for many national newspapers and magazines including the London Evening Standard, Daily Mail, Cosmopolitan and the New Statesman.

She is known for her writing on feminist issues and in cultural semiotics. Her books including Female Desire and Our Treacherous Hearts are still widely cited, as is the essay "Are Women's Novels Feminist Novels",[6] originally written for Feminist Review.[7]

She has a strong interest in environmental issues, and writes a regular column for The Ecologist magazine.[1]

Selected bibliography

Books

Articles

Reprinted as Coward, Rosalind (2011), ""This Novel Changes Lives": are women's novels feminist novels? A response to Rebecca O'Rourke's article "Summer Reading"", in Eagleton, Mary, Feminist literary theory: a reader (3rd ed.), Oxford, UK / Cambridge, Massachusetts, US: Blackwell, pp. 199–202, ISBN 9781405183130. 
Reprinted as Coward, Rosalind (1996), "Sex after AIDS", in Jackson, Stevi; Scott, Sue, Feminism and sexuality: a reader, New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 245–247, ISBN 9780231107082. 

Further reading

References

  1. 1 2 "Professor Rosalind Coward". roehampton.ac.uk. Roehampton University. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  2. "Professor Rosalind Coward". journalisted.com. Media Standards Trust.
  3. Coward, Rosalind (1981). The patriarchal theory: some modes of explanation of kinship in the social sciences (Ph.D. thesis). University of Greenwich. OCLC 847541431.
  4. Staff writer. "Profile: Ros Coward". The Guardian (Guardian Media Group).
  5. Coward, Ros. "Looking after mother". The Guardian (Guardian Media Group).
  6. Coward, Rosalind (1980). "This Novel Changes Lives": are women's novels feminist novels? A response to Rebecca O'Rourke's article "Summer Reading" cited as: Lauret, Maria (1994), "Liberating literature", Liberating literature feminist fiction in America, London New York: Routledge, p. 92, ISBN 9780415065153. Preview.
  7. Coward, Rosalind (1980). ""This Novel Changes Lives": are women's novels feminist novels? A response to Rebecca O'Rourke's article "Summer Reading"" 5. Palgrave Macmillan: 53–64. doi:10.2307/1394698. JSTOR 1394698.

External links

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