#UniLodz Podcasts

Historians in conversation - Dr Grethe Jacobsen

February 15, 2024 Uniwersytet Łódzki Season 1 Episode 18
Historians in conversation - Dr Grethe Jacobsen
#UniLodz Podcasts
More Info
#UniLodz Podcasts
Historians in conversation - Dr Grethe Jacobsen
Feb 15, 2024 Season 1 Episode 18
Uniwersytet Łódzki

How do historians build their career, what motivates them and how they deal with professional and personal challenges? What shapes their professional path? Dr Michael Green from the Faculty of Philosophy and History welcomes you to his podcast, where he will be inviting interesting guests to explore their stories.

Dr Grethe Jacobsen is an independent (retired) researcher, with two PhD degrees, and is renowned for her work on late Medieval women history. Her scholarly endeavours took her from her native Denmark to the United States and then back to Denmark, where she received a job a the Danish Royal Library. The conversation today revolves around the inspiration to engage with history, even when it did not become a source of income, and the benefits one can receive from historical research.

Grethe Jacobsen’s publications in English include: “The Celtic Element in the Icelandic Population and the Position of Women”, Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana, XLIV (Opuscula, XII), (2005): 284-303.

“Monasteries and Convents as Crown Fiefs, 1500-1600 – Especially for (Noble) Women?”. The Dissolution of Monasteries. The case of Denmark in a Regional Perspective, edited by Per Seesko, Louise Nyholm Kallestrup, Lars Bisgaard. Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, 2019, 57-74.

“Confronting Women’s Actions in History. Female Crown Fief Holders in Denmark.” Challenging Women’s Agency and Activism in Early Modernity, edited by Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks. Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2021, 107-117

Show Notes

How do historians build their career, what motivates them and how they deal with professional and personal challenges? What shapes their professional path? Dr Michael Green from the Faculty of Philosophy and History welcomes you to his podcast, where he will be inviting interesting guests to explore their stories.

Dr Grethe Jacobsen is an independent (retired) researcher, with two PhD degrees, and is renowned for her work on late Medieval women history. Her scholarly endeavours took her from her native Denmark to the United States and then back to Denmark, where she received a job a the Danish Royal Library. The conversation today revolves around the inspiration to engage with history, even when it did not become a source of income, and the benefits one can receive from historical research.

Grethe Jacobsen’s publications in English include: “The Celtic Element in the Icelandic Population and the Position of Women”, Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana, XLIV (Opuscula, XII), (2005): 284-303.

“Monasteries and Convents as Crown Fiefs, 1500-1600 – Especially for (Noble) Women?”. The Dissolution of Monasteries. The case of Denmark in a Regional Perspective, edited by Per Seesko, Louise Nyholm Kallestrup, Lars Bisgaard. Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, 2019, 57-74.

“Confronting Women’s Actions in History. Female Crown Fief Holders in Denmark.” Challenging Women’s Agency and Activism in Early Modernity, edited by Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks. Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2021, 107-117