The Women's Suffrage Movement and Irish Society in the Early Twentieth Century.

1992 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 559
Author(s):  
Catherine B. Shannon ◽  
Cliona Murphy
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
HENRY MILLER

Abstract Through an examination of the women's suffrage movement, this article reassesses the place of petitioning within late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British political culture. While critical of their Victorian predecessors’ reliance on petitions, the Edwardian women's suffrage movement did not abandon petitioning, but reinvented it. Rather than presenting a polarized view of relations between suffragettes and suffragists, the article shows how both operated on a spectrum of direct action politics through petitioning. Militants and constitutionalists pioneered new, although different, modes of petitioning that underpinned broader repertoires of popular politics, adapting this venerable practice to a nascent mass democracy. The article then situates suffrage campaigners’ reinvention of petitioning within a broader political context. The apparent decline of petitioning, long noted by scholars, is reframed as the waning of the classic model of mass petitioning parliament associated with Victorian pressure groups. The early twentieth century was a crucial period for the reshaping of petitioning as a tool for political participation and expression through myriad subscriptional forms, rather than primarily through the medium of parliamentary petitions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 41-53
Author(s):  
A. J. Kox ◽  
H. F. Schatz

Chapter 3 explains why it is valuable to devote a separate chapter to Aletta Lorentz Kaiser. It describes Aletta’s life and intelligent and ambitious personality and highlights the position of Dutch women more generally in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The chapter first focuses on the limitations of Aletta’s position as a professor’s wife in small-town Leiden, unable to do any paid work herself and constrained to being “the woman behind the important man.” It shows how she managed to circumvent these constraints and how she was able to carve out a position for herself, first in charitable work on behalf of needy women and later in the early Dutch feminist movement and the national struggle for women’s suffrage.


Author(s):  
Ben Epstein

This chapter explores communication innovations made by American social movements over time. These movements share political communication goals and outsider status, which helps to connect innovation decisions across movements and across time. The chapter primarily explores two long-lasting movements. First is the women’s suffrage movement, which lasted over seventy years of the print era from the mid-nineteenth century until the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. Next is the long-lasting fight against racial discrimination, which led to the modern civil rights movement starting in the print era, but coming of age along with television during the 1950s and 1960s. Both the women’s suffrage movement and civil rights movement utilized innovative tactics with similarly mild results until mainstream coverage improved. Finally, these historical movements are compared with movements emerging during the internet era, including the early Tea Party, Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, and the Resist movement.


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