Catherine Barrett (later Hall) was born in 1946 in Kettering, Northamptonshire.[1] Her father, John Barrett, was a Baptist minister, while her mother, Gladys, came from a family of millers.[2] Her parents met at Oxford University, where Gladys was studying history. When Catherine was three years old, the family moved to Leeds, Yorkshire, and she grew up there in a non-conformist household; both parents were "radical Labour". She went to grammar school, where she says she had an excellent education.[1]
Hall was involved in student politics and activism in Birmingham around 1968, but then had a baby, which changed her life. She got involved in the women's movement, became a feminist historian, and co-wrote Family Fortunes with Leonore Davidoff in 1987.[1]
Hall is a feminist historian, known for her work on gender, class, race and empire between 1700 and 1900.[5]
She was employed as a "gender historian" at the Northeast London Polytechnic (now the University of East London) in the late 1980s, which involved looking at history from a feminist perspective, creating a new discipline subsequently known as feminist history. During this time, the discipline of postcolonialism developed, and she became interested in this topic.[1]
She was appointed Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History University College London (UCL) in 1998, and was Principal Investigator of the "Legacies of British Slave Ownership" and "Structure and Significance of British-Caribbean Slave Ownership, 1763–1833" research projects. She retired from her professorship on 31 July 2016.[6]
2002: Morris D. Forkosch Prize in British History[8]
2016: Offered the Dan David Prize from the Dan David Foundation in Tel Aviv, Israel, which included a £225,000 research fund; however, in support of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement in, Hall rejected the award, stating that it was "an independent political choice" to do so.[9]
2021: Leverhulme Medal, awarded by the British Academy "in recognition of Professor Hall's impact across modern and contemporary British history, particularly in the fields of class, gender, empire and postcolonial history"[11]
Personal life
Hall met her future husband, cultural theorist and activist Stuart Hall, on a Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament march in the early 1960s, and the two would go on to marry in 1964. The couple had a daughter, Becky, and son, Jess, and the family lived in Birmingham.[3][12] Stuart was Jamaican, and with mixed-race children, Catherine was aware of the legacy of British colonialism before commencing her academic work on the topic.[1]
^Hall, Stuart. (2018). Familiar Stranger : a life between two islands. [Place of publication not identified]: Penguin Books. ISBN978-0-14-198475-9. OCLC1005885722.