At the turn of the 20th century, parts of the peaceful suffragists had grown frustrated with the lack of progress that had been made towards women’s suffrage. From this frustration new organisations were established that turned to more radical and, at times, violent strategies to draw attention to their cause. This paper focuses on the militant part of the fight for women’s suffrage and the effect the militancy had on the contemporary view of the women’s rights movement. The paper argues that despite creating a negative view of the women’s suffrage movement, the militant efforts weren’t entirely wasted since it created publicity for the movement and helped restart the discussion on women’s suffrage
This thesis focuses on woman suffrage magazines and how they influenced the right to vote. Three fac...
Dawn Langan Teele writes that although the recent film Suffragette bucks the elite perspective of th...
From 1832 to the present day, from the countryside in Wales to the Comintern in Moscow, from America...
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...
This paper takes a generational approach to understanding what the suffragettes were fighting for an...
This work challenges the consistent application by historians of the term’s militant to the Women’s ...
This work challenges the consistent application by historians of the term’s militant to the Women’s ...
After decades of struggling to gain the right to vote, women were finally granted that right with th...
This article investigates the rhetoric employed by the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in ...
This thesis challenges the conventional wisdom that the W.S.P.U.'s strategy choices were unimportant...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
The Women’s Social and Political Union was a leading suffrage organization in Britain especially ren...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
Through an examination of the women's suffrage movement, this article reassesses the place of petiti...
This thesis focuses on woman suffrage magazines and how they influenced the right to vote. Three fac...
Dawn Langan Teele writes that although the recent film Suffragette bucks the elite perspective of th...
From 1832 to the present day, from the countryside in Wales to the Comintern in Moscow, from America...
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...
This paper takes a generational approach to understanding what the suffragettes were fighting for an...
This work challenges the consistent application by historians of the term’s militant to the Women’s ...
This work challenges the consistent application by historians of the term’s militant to the Women’s ...
After decades of struggling to gain the right to vote, women were finally granted that right with th...
This article investigates the rhetoric employed by the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in ...
This thesis challenges the conventional wisdom that the W.S.P.U.'s strategy choices were unimportant...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
The Women’s Social and Political Union was a leading suffrage organization in Britain especially ren...
The ‘Women’s Suffrage’ collection in Gender: Identity and Social Change (drawn from several of the s...
Through an examination of the women's suffrage movement, this article reassesses the place of petiti...
This thesis focuses on woman suffrage magazines and how they influenced the right to vote. Three fac...
Dawn Langan Teele writes that although the recent film Suffragette bucks the elite perspective of th...
From 1832 to the present day, from the countryside in Wales to the Comintern in Moscow, from America...