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Political Women: Fifteen Campaigns that Changed Twenty-First-Century Britain

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Political Women: Fifteen Campaigns that Changed Twenty-First-Century Britain

Contributors:

By (Author) Maggie Andrews

ISBN:

9781399012348

Publisher:

Pen & Sword Books Ltd

Imprint:

Pen & Sword History

Publication Date:

27th February 2024

UK Publication Date:

29th February 2024

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies: women and girls

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

The lives of women changed immeasurably during the twentieth century, not just because of technological and economic advances, but as a result of a multiplicity of small and large, local, national and international political campaigns by women. The activities of the Edwardian suffrage campaigns are the most well-known example of this, but in less well-known, political struggles women fought with equal tenacity, sacrifice, and inventiveness, to demand, for example, equal pay, analgesics for women and childbirth, an end to virginity testing at airports or wages for housework. This book focuses on 15 such campaigns and the thousands of women who sought to influence decision making, exercise and challenge power in the twentieth century. These political activities were sometimes small-scale and short-lived or seemingly unsuccessful but together they helped to bring about immeasurable changes in women's lives during the twentieth century. With limited financial resources and hefty domestic responsibilities, women have often chosen to pick their political battles very carefully. Some fought for workers' rights or the right to education, some prioritised stopping male violence on the streets, in the home or between nations, others like Radcliffe Hall campaigned so women could define their own sexuality. Women organised self-help childcare, rape crisis centres and peace camps. They set up birth control clinics and women's refuges. Ordinary women took on exploitive landlords, immigration officers, international companies, local councils, the media and successive governments. A few of the hundreds of thousands of these political women, like Maggie Wintringham and Nancy Astor, were MPs; others became local councillors. However, women's access to traditional areas of political power was limited, even when Britain had its first woman prime minister in 1979, she was one of only 19 women MPs in parliament. Consequently, women sought other spheres of activity through which to fight for change, using all the resources and imagination at their disposal to challenge injustice and abuse. They employed deeds and words, petitions and protests, legal and illegal devices, peaceful and violent strategies to further their political aims. Their motivations and contributions were varied, many made sacrifices to be involved in political battles, but this book seeks to celebrate some of these unsung heroines who tried to make a difference. AUTHOR: Maggie Andrews is Emeritus Professor of Cultural History at the University of Worcester. She has published several books on areas of twentieth-century women's social and cultural history, including Women and Evacuation in the Second World War: Femininity, Domesticity and Motherhood (Bloomsbury 2019) and with Janis Lomas, A History of Women in 100 Objects (History Press 2018). She is a long-term member and former chair of the Women's History Network. Maggie has undertaken a range of media work; she was an AHRC-funded adviser to the BBC in the West Midlands on the World War One at Home Project and the historical consultant for the Radio 4 Drama Home Front. After more than 30 years of teaching in higher, further and adult education, she now spends her time on researching, writing and enjoying the company of family and dogs in Sussex. 30 b/w illustrations

Author Bio

Maggie Andrews is Emeritus Professor of Cultural History at the University of Worcester.She has published several books on areas of twentieth-century womens social and cultural history, includingWomen and Evacuation in the Second World War: Femininity, Domesticity and Motherhood (Bloomsbury 2019) and with Janis Lomas, A History of Women in 100 Objects (History Press 2018). She is a long-term member and former chair of the Womens History Network. Maggie has undertaken a range of media work; she was an AHRC-funded adviser to the BBC in the West Midlands on the World War One at Home Project and the historical consultant for the Radio 4 Drama Home Front. After more than 30 years of teaching in higher, further and adult education, she now spends her time on researching, writing and enjoying the company of family and dogs in Sussex.

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