Description
Levine traces the changing face of a half century of England's feminist movement, the personalities who dominated it, its pressing issues, and the tactics employed in the fight. Political themes common to the specific protests, she finds, included women's moral superiority, a close-knit sense of a supportive female community, and a conscious woman-centeredness of interests.
Along the way, Levine puts to rest many inaccuracies and assumptions that have dogged the history of presuffragette feminism, causing it to be discredited or dismissed. She refutes, for example, the judgement that the movement served only the needs of bourgeois women, and she warns against the pitfall of defining feminism by the standards of a male politics whose practices make comparisons inadequate and unsuitable.
Levine has organized her study with an eye to the breadth of concerns that characterized England's nineteenth-century feminism: women's entry into education and the professions; trade unionism, working conditions, equal pay; suffrage and other political and property rights for women; marriage and morality issues prostitution, incest, venereal disease, wife abuse, pornography, and equal rights to divorce.
About the Author
Philippa Levine is Walter Prescott Webb Chair in History and Ideas in the department of history at the University of Texas at Austin and codirector of the program in British Studies.
Book Information
ISBN 9780813013213
Author Philippa Levine
Format Paperback
Page Count 176
Imprint University Press of Florida
Publisher University Press of Florida
Weight(grams) 243g
Dimensions(mm) 219mm * 156mm * 11mm