In spite of recent literature that examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century transnational movements in innovative ways, the largest transnational movement of that period, the women\u27s movement, remains lodged in academic and popular memory as the suffrage movement, a single-issue campaign waged by privileged Victorian women, a foregone development in the march of electoral progress that ended in victory with postwar enfranchisement. A fresh approach to the suffrage archive reveals instead a far more radical movement than conventional history suggests, one that explicitly linked its cause with both the revolutionary democratic tradition and with anti-colonial activism. Like the non-Western nationalists with whom they were oft...
Backed by a global editorial board of 130 leading scholars, Women and Social Movements, Internationa...
In this article I consider the ways in which activists in the British suffrage movement became the p...
It is difficult to imagine that only seventy-five years ago, a woman\u27s right to vote was not prot...
In spite of recent literature that examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century transnationa...
Over the past 20 years, suffrage historians have sought to reimagine their field—traditionally tethe...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
From 1832 to the present day, from the countryside in Wales to the Comintern in Moscow, from America...
Suffrage is the most significant political development within modern Liberal states. Despite this fa...
Women's Activism brings together twelve innovative contributions from feminist historians from aroun...
In 1928 the YWCA welcomed the introduction of the universal suffrage by declaring that women in Brit...
"This book chronicles the dawn of the global movement for women's rights in the first decades of the...
This thesis shows that the first wave Women's Movement\ud continued the struggle for the franchise d...
This thesis shows that the first wave Women's Movement continued the struggle for the franchise duri...
The U. S. women\u27s movement began in 1848 with the Seneca Falls Convention for women\u27s rights. ...
Backed by a global editorial board of 130 leading scholars, Women and Social Movements, Internationa...
In this article I consider the ways in which activists in the British suffrage movement became the p...
It is difficult to imagine that only seventy-five years ago, a woman\u27s right to vote was not prot...
In spite of recent literature that examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century transnationa...
Over the past 20 years, suffrage historians have sought to reimagine their field—traditionally tethe...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
From 1832 to the present day, from the countryside in Wales to the Comintern in Moscow, from America...
Suffrage is the most significant political development within modern Liberal states. Despite this fa...
Women's Activism brings together twelve innovative contributions from feminist historians from aroun...
In 1928 the YWCA welcomed the introduction of the universal suffrage by declaring that women in Brit...
"This book chronicles the dawn of the global movement for women's rights in the first decades of the...
This thesis shows that the first wave Women's Movement\ud continued the struggle for the franchise d...
This thesis shows that the first wave Women's Movement continued the struggle for the franchise duri...
The U. S. women\u27s movement began in 1848 with the Seneca Falls Convention for women\u27s rights. ...
Backed by a global editorial board of 130 leading scholars, Women and Social Movements, Internationa...
In this article I consider the ways in which activists in the British suffrage movement became the p...
It is difficult to imagine that only seventy-five years ago, a woman\u27s right to vote was not prot...