Clementine Black ( eng. Clementina Black ; July 27, 1853 , Brighton — December 19, 1922 , ibid.) - English writer, economist and feminist . After the death of his mother (1875), Black remained the eldest in the family (his father was seriously ill), which included 6 brothers and sisters. She decided to make a living with fiction, as a result of which the novel Sussex Idyll (1877) was born. Black moves to London with his sister Constance to continue writing as a writer.
| Clementine Black | |
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| English Clementina black | |
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| Scientific field | economy |
In 1886, Black met Eleanor Marx . Together with a friend, they began working in the Women's Trade Union League . Black becomes general secretary of the organization. In 1894, Black headed the Women's Industrial Council . Black was also an active member of the Fabian Society and a member of the London-based organization of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies .
Major economic works
- "Heavy industry and minimum wages" (Sweated Industry and the Minimum Wage, 1907);
- “Labor of Married Women” (Married Women's Work, 1915).
Notes
- ↑ SNAC - 2010.
- Lain Blain V. , Grundy I. , Clements P. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English : 1990. - P. 96.