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Published byShon Curtis Modified over 9 years ago
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When did women gain the right to vote? 1893: New Zealand 1906: Finland 1913: Norway, Denmark 1918: Great Britain, Germany, Austria, USSR, Sweden 1920: USA 1931: Spain 1944/45: France, Italy 1971: Switzerland 1984: Liechtenstein In Britain the law- abiding National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies had 300,000 members in 1912, and the “militant” Women’s Social and Political Union, 50,000
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British suffragist poster, ca. 1906
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A WSPU rally, ca. 1908
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WSPU activists arrested in 1906 for marching on Parliament
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Emmeline Pankhurst arrested outside Buckingham Palace Picture of her prison cell, 1911
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The gradual decline in birthrates and rise in life expectancy nurtured the idea that women should be able to combine motherhood and a career
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THE FINDINGS OF JOAN SCOTT & LOUISE TILLY FOR FRANCE
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The French Union for Women’s Suffrage (founded in 1909) had 12,000 members in 1914: “French Women Want the Vote: Against alcohol, slums, and war”
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Delegates to the Women’s Suffrage Congress in Munich, 1912
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“Women’s Dreams about the Marriage of the Future” (1908)
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“Give Us Women’s Suffrage!” Poster for the SPD- sponsored International Women’s Day on March 8, 1914
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Women in a German shell factory, 1916/17
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German women at work in a munitions factory, 1916. High wages and government propaganda lured women into jobs they had never held before, such as lathe operator and munitions worker
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“A New Berlin Street Scene from Wartime: Women Window Cleaners Exercise their Trade in Men’s Clothing” (1917)
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Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg founded the Spartacus League in 1917, proclaimed a “Soviet Republic” on November 9, 1918, and then founded the German Communist Party.
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A Frenchwoman operates a lathe in a metalworking factory
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J. Barnard Davis, “The Workroom of the Gerrard’s Cross War Hospital Supply Depot” (1918)
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Workers in a British shell factory, 1918
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E.F. Skinner, “For King and Country” (ca. 1917)
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Women miners haul clay to be fired into bricks in Wales
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“On Her their Lives Depend” (recruitment poster for the British munitions industry, ca. 1916)
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“Preserve Perishable Produce” (Food Production Department, London, 1917/18)
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H.G. Gawthorn, “National Service Women’s Land Army,” Great Britain, 1917
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Albert Sterner, “We need you,” USA, 1918
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“We give our work, our men, our lives if need be. Will you give us the Vote?” USA, 1917
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“The Glorious Dead” (the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London, designed by Sir Edward Lutyens, built in 1919/20)
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