Calls for Papers, Events

Gendering the Workplace

West of England and South Wales Women’s History Network Annual Conference Sat 20th June, 2015 10am – 5pm  Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution, 18-16 Queen Square, Bath, BA1 2HN Keynote speaker: Selina Todd, St Hilda’s College, University of Oxford, Women, work…

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General, Politics, Women's History

Young Adult Literature – Censoring Teenage Sexual Autonomy

In the novels by Blume, Klein, et al, ‘two nice kids, in love, have sexual intercourse and no one dies.’ In both Blume’s ‘Forever’ and Klein’s ‘It’s Ok if you Don’t Love Me’, the male love interests are the ones left alone, the girls having moved on and embodied the traditionally ‘masculine’ relationship role. The young women in these books enjoy sex, and their experiences are discussed in detail. Crucially, they enjoy sex as just one component of a rounded lifestyle, as with Blume’s Sybil: ‘Sybil Davison has a genius IQ and has been laid by at least six different guys.’

Events, Events

History of Voluntary Action Conference

  Teaching the History of Voluntary Action: National, International and Transnational Perspectives Saturday 28th February 2015 Queen Mary University of London, 10am-4.30pm In September 2013, a group of historians with common interests in voluntary action history came together at a…

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Biography, Politics, Source, Women's History

Who Was Miss Hooper?

Miss Hooper makes an intriguing sight, wrapped up against the elements. You can’t see her face, but this isn’t the only source of mystery – there is also wonder about what she’s doing out there in the hills and how she can even survive, seemingly against the odds. A woman alone in the bitter cold, she seems almost to be a relic from the past.

Women's History Journal

Women’s History Autumn 2014

Download the PDF edition of this journal here. Military Women Special Issue. Contents Wendy Toon on Women and the military, 4 Lucy Noakes on Women in the British army in the post-war years, 5 Corinna Peniston-Bird on British auxiliaries and their weapons in the Second World…

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