Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon and the Langham Place GroupRoutledge, 2013/07/04 - 496 ページ First published in 1987. Reprints material from the 1850's and 1860's, a period which marked a turning point in the history of British Feminism. At the centre of this was Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, whose pioneering schemes to improve the status of women made these years some of the richest in debate and reform |
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... engage in trade , and may occupy inferior situations , such as matron of a charity , sextoness of a church , and a few parochial offices are 23 Important Laws Concerning Women: Together with a Few Observations Thereon (1854)
... engage in trade , and may occupy inferior situations , such as matron of a charity , sextoness of a church , and a few parochial offices are 23 Important Laws Concerning Women: Together with a Few Observations Thereon (1854)
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... Charity or Mercy than a young lady at home without a work or a lover . We do not mean to say work will take the place of love in life , that is impossible ; does it with men ? But we ardently desire that women should not make love their ...
... Charity or Mercy than a young lady at home without a work or a lover . We do not mean to say work will take the place of love in life , that is impossible ; does it with men ? But we ardently desire that women should not make love their ...
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... Charity ( the physicians are non - resident ) . " The number of resident lunatics under treatment , on the day of my visit , ' writes Dr Webster , ' amounted to 269 altogether , of whom 201 were considered incurables . No person was ...
... Charity ( the physicians are non - resident ) . " The number of resident lunatics under treatment , on the day of my visit , ' writes Dr Webster , ' amounted to 269 altogether , of whom 201 were considered incurables . No person was ...
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... charity is impossible under the multitude of restrictions amidst which they exist ; they can neither read nor write , and they are not taught any manual art by which women deprived of other means of subsistence might gain their daily ...
... charity is impossible under the multitude of restrictions amidst which they exist ; they can neither read nor write , and they are not taught any manual art by which women deprived of other means of subsistence might gain their daily ...
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目次
17 | |
36 | |
MiddleClass Schools for Girls 1860 | 74 |
Of Those who are the Property of Others and of | 84 |
Accomplices 1864 | 97 |
Reasons for the Enfranchisement of Women 1866 | 104 |
Objections to the Enfranchisement of Women Considered | 112 |
Authorities and Precedents for giving the Suffrage | 118 |
Local Societies 1861 | 250 |
On the Choice of a Business 1862 | 259 |
On the Cause of the Distress prevalent among Single | 268 |
Emily Faithfull | 279 |
Women Compositors 1861 | 287 |
Isa Craig | 293 |
its Cause and Cure 1859 | 305 |
Maria Susan Rye | 321 |
A Conversation on the Enfranchisement of Female | 133 |
Bessie Rayner Parkes | 139 |
What Can Educated Women Do? I 1859 | 150 |
What Can Educated Women Do? II 1860 | 163 |
Statistics as to the Employment of the Female Population | 174 |
A Years Experience in Womans Work 1860 | 180 |
The Condition of Working Women in England and France | 190 |
The Balance of Public Opinion in Regard to Womans | 200 |
Female Life in Prison 1862 | 206 |
A Review of the Last Six Years 1864 | 215 |
Jessie Boucherett | 223 |
On the Education of Girls with Reference to their Future | 241 |
On Assisted Emigration 1860 | 337 |
Frances Power Cobbe | 345 |
What Shall We Do With Our Old Maids? 1862 | 354 |
Criminals Idiots Women and Minors Is the Classification | 378 |
Emily Davies | 403 |
Medicine as a Profession for Women 1862 | 410 |
On Secondary Instruction as Relating to Girls 1864 | 428 |
Elizabeth Garrett | 441 |
Elizabeth Blackwell | 451 |
Medicine as a Profession for Women 1860 | 461 |
Index | 477 |
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多く使われている語句
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