Adela Pankhurst: The Wayward Suffragette 1885-1961
By (Author) Verna Coleman
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
4th August 1992
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Biography: philosophy and social sciences
Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action
Gender studies: women and girls
324.623092
Paperback
220
Width 142mm, Height 214mm, Spine 15mm
296g
First biography of Pankhurst, daughter of the famous suffragist family and a wayward and passionate participant in early Australian radical politics. As the youngest daughter of the famous British suffragette family, Adela Pankhurst's life began as it would continue- among thinkers and activists. She was arrested for her part in the fight for female suffrage in the United Kingdom but, after differences with her mother she was sent to Australia. Arriving in Melbourne in 1914, Adela quickly became involved with the women's movement and the anti-war and anti-conscription movements. Wayward and passionate, she zigzagged from cause to cause. Adela was a founding member of the Communist Party of Australia, but later became involved with the extreme right-wing Australia First movement. During her fast-paced life she managed to offend socialists, communists, trade unionists, patriots, pacifists, feminists, nationalists, imperialists and conservatives. Verna Coleman vividly brings this extraordinary woman to life. Feisty and inspirational, Adela Pankhurst brought a whole-hearted commitment to her various campaigns, and to read her biography is to be caught up in the heady excitement of some of the most significant political causes of the twentieth century.
Verna Coleman was born and educated in New South Wales, but has lived in England, the United States and Sudan. Australian history and literature, particularly of the Edwardian age, are her major research interests and she is the author of biographies of Miles Franklin and Frederic Manning.