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The politics of women’s suffrage: The politics of women’s suffrage
The politics of women’s suffrage
The politics of women’s suffrage
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table of contents
Cover
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Foreword: the women’s movement, war and the vote. Some reflections on 1918 and its aftermath
I
II
III
IV
List of tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Historiographical context
Contributions
Conclusion
I. Working within existing political structures
1. The ‘success of every great movement had been largely due to the free and continuous exercise of the right to petition’: Irish suffrage petitioners and parliamentarians in the nineteenth century
Introduction
The ‘particular’ case of Ireland
The early years of suffrage activity in Ireland
Irish politicians at Westminster
The founding of the Dublin Women’s Suffrage Association
Petitions
Conclusion
2. Singing ‘The Red Flag’ for suffrage: class, feminism and local politics in the Canning Town branch of the Women’s Social and Political Union, 1906–7
A brief history of the Canning Town branch of the WSPU
Membership and culture
Beliefs and objectives
Priorities and strategies
Conclusion
3. Suffrage organizers, grassroots activism and the campaign in Wales
Suffrage societies and Welsh identity: an overview
Suffrage organizers, cultural clashes and regional centres
Welsh language, Liberalism and rural communities
Coalfield communities, the labour movement and suffrage
Conclusion
4. Suffrage, infant welfare and women’s politics in Walsall, 1910–39
Women’s suffrage in Walsall
The infant welfare movement in Walsall
Walsall in the aftermath of enfranchisement
Conclusion
5. ‘Keep your eyes on us because there is no more napping’: the wartime suffrage campaigns of the Suffragettes of the WSPU and the Independent WSPU
Suffrage responses to war
‘Reunite without delay’: the establishment of the Suffragettes of the WSPU and Independent WSPU
Wartime suffrage campaigning
Adult suffrage versus partial suffrage
Wider concerns: National Registration Day and the Royal Commission for Venereal Disease
The Speaker’s Conference and the Representation of the People Act
Conclusion
II. Working through social and cultural structures
6. English girls’ schools and women’s suffrage
7. ‘A mistake to raise any controversial question at the present time’: the careful relationship of Glasgow’s suffragists with the press, 1902–18
The Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women’s Suffrage
The oxygen of publicity
Relations with the suffrage press
Conclusion
8. ‘The weakest link’: suffrage writing, class interests and the isolated woman of leisure
9. Militancy in the marital sphere: sex strikes, marriage strikes and birth strikes as militant suffrage tactics, 1911–14
The three tactics: sex-, marriage- and birth-striking
Striking, militancy and gender
Sex and birth strikes as women’s sacrifice
Conclusion
III. Navigating international structures
10. ‘East Side Londoners’: Sylvia Pankhurst’s lecture tours of North America and the East London Federation of Suffragettes
Organizational models: the WTUL and settlement houses
Emerson and the CWTUL
The Lewisohns and Henry Street Settlement
Recontextualizing 1912
11. Suffrage internationalism in practice: Dora Montefiore and the lessons of Finnish women’s enfranchisement
Dora Montefiore visits Finland
Telling the story of Finnish women’s enfranchisement
Competing narratives of Finnish women’s enfranchisement
Putting the Finnish example to work in the polarized suffrage politics of Britain
New voices and new emphases
Conclusion
12. Emotions and empire in suffrage and anti-suffrage politics: Britain, Ireland and Australia in the early twentieth century
Introduction
A history of emotions and politics
Ireland and the complex dynamics of gender, shame and colonization
Australian women voters, colonial anxiety and national pride
British anti-suffragists and the embarrassment of colonial naivety
Conclusion
13. From Votes for Women to world revolution: British and Irish suffragettes and international communism, 1919–39
Introduction
Engagement with Comintern front organizations
Emigration to Soviet Russia and employment in Comintern institutions
The view from the Comintern
Conclusion
Afterword: a tale of two centennials: suffrage, suffragettes and the limits of political participation in Britain and America
Radicalism and respectability
‘I’d rather be a rebel than a slave’
Index
About This Text
For Professor Senia Pašeta
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