A discussion of novels by Jean Devanney, Eleanor Dark and Barnard Eldershaw in the context of the 'crisis' in birth rates and birth control of the 1930s and 1940s
Nineteenth century feminists demanded female autonomy and made two sets of claims arising from that....
Women's fight for the franchise in both America and England in the late nineteenth and early twentie...
This article examines the ways in which voluntarily childless women are represented in contemporary ...
Discusses birth control plots that can interrupt historical accounts of Australian feminism that off...
New Women, New Mothers contributes to New Woman scholarship by investigating the background, substan...
The concept of maternalism emerged during the mid-19th century, as a way of analysing the problems e...
This dissertation examines how American writers in the 1920s demonstrated the eugenic influence on m...
Resisting Reproductive Regulation contributes to a growing body of criticism about how women partici...
Motherhood is a momentous life-change for women. While commonalities of experience exist between wo...
“Deliver Me: Pregnancy, Birth, and the Body in the British Novel, 1900-1950” explores three ways Bri...
Two short stories by white indigenous Australian women writers, “A Cross line” (1893) by George Eger...
Les études consacrées au mouvement canadien du contrôle des naissances ont jusqu’alors insisté sur l...
This thesis interrogates the specific construction of the maternal citizen in Australia. While the p...
This article examines Naomi Mitchison's most contentious novel – We Have Been Warned (1935). Mitchis...
This project considers the demands American women confront about their societal roles, particularly ...
Nineteenth century feminists demanded female autonomy and made two sets of claims arising from that....
Women's fight for the franchise in both America and England in the late nineteenth and early twentie...
This article examines the ways in which voluntarily childless women are represented in contemporary ...
Discusses birth control plots that can interrupt historical accounts of Australian feminism that off...
New Women, New Mothers contributes to New Woman scholarship by investigating the background, substan...
The concept of maternalism emerged during the mid-19th century, as a way of analysing the problems e...
This dissertation examines how American writers in the 1920s demonstrated the eugenic influence on m...
Resisting Reproductive Regulation contributes to a growing body of criticism about how women partici...
Motherhood is a momentous life-change for women. While commonalities of experience exist between wo...
“Deliver Me: Pregnancy, Birth, and the Body in the British Novel, 1900-1950” explores three ways Bri...
Two short stories by white indigenous Australian women writers, “A Cross line” (1893) by George Eger...
Les études consacrées au mouvement canadien du contrôle des naissances ont jusqu’alors insisté sur l...
This thesis interrogates the specific construction of the maternal citizen in Australia. While the p...
This article examines Naomi Mitchison's most contentious novel – We Have Been Warned (1935). Mitchis...
This project considers the demands American women confront about their societal roles, particularly ...
Nineteenth century feminists demanded female autonomy and made two sets of claims arising from that....
Women's fight for the franchise in both America and England in the late nineteenth and early twentie...
This article examines the ways in which voluntarily childless women are represented in contemporary ...