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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... mind as to believe that women have no rights to full development of all their faculties and exercise of all their powers, to believe that men have rights over women, and as fathers to exercise those pretended rights over daughters, as ...
... mind as to believe that women have no rights to full development of all their faculties and exercise of all their powers, to believe that men have rights over women, and as fathers to exercise those pretended rights over daughters, as ...
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... minds and their bodies. They want it often because they must eat and because they have children and others dependent on them —for all the reasons that men want work. (p. 64) Candida Ann Lacey Brighton, December 1985 NOTES 1 In 1855 ...
... minds and their bodies. They want it often because they must eat and because they have children and others dependent on them —for all the reasons that men want work. (p. 64) Candida Ann Lacey Brighton, December 1985 NOTES 1 In 1855 ...
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... mind and memory may make a will. By the statute of Ohio it is expressly provided that the will of an unmarried woman shall not be revoked by her subsequent marriage. What changes we find in the American laws are improvements upon ours ...
... mind and memory may make a will. By the statute of Ohio it is expressly provided that the will of an unmarried woman shall not be revoked by her subsequent marriage. What changes we find in the American laws are improvements upon ours ...
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... mind, she will be much dissatisfied with this answer, and say, 'But if no one ask me to marry whom I can love? or suppose I do not want to marry? Suppose my husband dies? or what am I to do 38 Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon.
... mind, she will be much dissatisfied with this answer, and say, 'But if no one ask me to marry whom I can love? or suppose I do not want to marry? Suppose my husband dies? or what am I to do 38 Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon.
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... mind so continually fixed on that one hope that it becomes gradually a monomania. It is difficult for fathers and mothers when they look at their daughters young, charming, full of cheerfulness and life, to think that they can change ...
... mind so continually fixed on that one hope that it becomes gradually a monomania. It is difficult for fathers and mothers when they look at their daughters young, charming, full of cheerfulness and life, to think that they can change ...
目次
1 | |
17 | |
21 | |
Bessie Rayner Parkes | 139 |
Jessie Boucherett | 223 |
Emily Faithfull | 279 |
Isa Craig | 293 |
Maria Susan Rye | 321 |
Frances Power Cobbe | 345 |
Emily Davies | 403 |
Elizabeth Garrett | 441 |
Elizabeth Blackwell | 451 |
Index | 477 |
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多く使われている語句
Adelaide Anne Procter admit Barbara Bodichon Barbara Leigh Smith benefit cause chiefly civilisation common condition consider daughters desire difficulty domestic duties earn educated women Elizabeth Blackwell emigration Emily Davies employed Employment of Women England English Woman’s journal established evil fact father feeling female field find first fit five Frances Power Cobbe girls give hospital husband influence institutions instruction Isa Craig knowledge labour ladies Langham Place lives London marriage married women matron matter means medicine middle class mind Miss moral mother National nature nurses office opinion persons physicians poor possess practical present prison profession qualified question received schools single women sisters slave slavery social society sufficient teaching telegraph things trade University of London Victoria Press vote wife wife’s woman workhouse young