Women's History: Britain, 1850-1945: An IntroductionRoutledge |
Contents
Chapter One From women worthies to poststructuralism? Debate and controversy in womens history in Britain | 1 |
Chapter Two Women and industrialization | 20 |
Chapter Three Women and the family | 44 |
Chapter Four Women and paid work | 72 |
Chapter Five Women and education | 91 |
Chapter Six Women and popular literature | 111 |
Chapter Seven Women and health | 133 |
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Common terms and phrases
activity rates argued Basil Blackwell became Britain British Cambridge census cent Chartism Christabel Pankhurst cultural debate domestic economic Emily Davies Emmeline Pankhurst equal Esther Roper example female femininity feminism feminist history gender historians History Workshop Journal household husbands Ibid ideology imperial important Industrial Revolution interwar Irish issues Labour Party lesbian Liberal London magazines male Manchester marriage married women maternal men’s middle-class women militancy Millicent Garrett Fawcett modern moral motherhood mothers National Union nineteenth century ofthe organization Oxford paid Pankhurst period perspective political prostitution reform role Routledge schools Second World Second World War sexology sexual socialist society spinster suffrage movement suffragists twentieth century University Press Victorian Virago wages wives woman Women in England Women workers women’s employment women’s experience women’s health women’s history Women’s History Review women’s lives women’s movement women’s studies women’s suffrage working-class women WSPU