Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions

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Assembly Rooms
Bedford College
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Britain
British social reform
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Durham College
Education
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Feminism
Fenwick Miller
gender equality history
higher education access
historical analysis of women's emancipation
Home Work
Lady Margaret Hall
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Married Woman
Married Woman's Property
Married Woman's Property Act
Married Woman’s Property
Married Woman’s Property Act
Married Women's Property Committee
Medicine
Miss Chessar
nineteenth-century feminism
North London Collegiate School
Notting Hill High School
Park Street
Public Day Schools Company
Royal Humane Society
Separate Estate
Somerville Halls
Town Hall
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Victorian women's rights
Women
women in medicine
Women's Emigration Society
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Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138223530
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 17 May 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Englishwoman’s Review, which published from 1866 to 1910, participated in and recorded a great change in the range of possibilities open to women. The ideal of the magazine was the idea of the emerging emancipated middle-class woman: economic independence from men, choice of occupation, participation in the male enterprises of commerce and government, access to higher education, admittance to the male professions, particularly medicine, and, of course, the power of suffrage equal to that of men.

First published in 1979, this thirteenth volume contains issues from 1880. With an informative introduction by Janet Horowitz Murray and Myra Stark, and an index compiled by Anna Clark, this set is an invaluable resource to those studying nineteenth and early twentieth-century feminism and the women’s movement in Britain.

Janet Horowitz Murray, Myra Stark