Eleanor Rathbone and the Politics of Conscience
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Yale University Press
Published:12th Aug '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
When British women demanded the vote in the years before the First World War, they promised to use political rights to remake their country and their world. This is the story of Eleanor Rathbone, the woman who best fulfilled that pledge.
Rathbone cut her political teeth in the suffrage movement in Liverpool, spent two decades crafting social reforms for poor women and children, and was for seventeen years their advocate in the House of Commons. She also played a critical role in imperial policymaking and in the opposition to appeasement. In the last decade of her life she sought to rescue Spanish republicans and Jews threatened by Hitler’s rise to power.
In this important book, Susan Pedersen illuminates both the public and private sides of Rathbone’s life while restoring her to her rightful place as the most sophisticated feminist thinker and most effective British woman politician of the first half of the twentieth century.
Co-Winner of the 2005 Albion Book Prize sponsored by the North American Conference on British Studies for the Best Book Published anywhere by a North American Scholar on any Aspect of British Studies since 1800
“From its opening pages, this long meditated book is clearly prize-winning material.”—Stefan Collini, Cambridge University
ISBN: 9780300212204
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 676g
488 pages