<p>'The ability of this volume to cover the vast span of time with depth and detail makes it a vital addition for anyone trying to understand the Conservative Party and the women within it. This edited volume gives readers insight into the right-wing women often ignored given the growing connection of women with left-leaning parties. It is particularly timely given the rise in right-wing politics globally. The volume has a little bit for everyone, whether interested in specific Conservative women, the history and nature of the party, or how it has adapted to changing cultural times.'<br />Journal of Women, Politics & Policy</p>
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Introduction: Clarisse Berthezène & Julie Gottlieb
1. ‘Open the eyes of England’: female unionism and conservatism, 1886-1914 - Diane Urquhart
2. Christabel Pankhurst - A Conservative suffragette? - June Purvis
3. At the heart of the party? The women’s Conservative organisation in the age of partial suffrage, 1914-1928 - David Thackeray
4. Conservative women and the Primrose League’s struggle for survival, 1914-1932 - Matthew Hendley
5. Modes and models of Conservative women’s leadership in the 1930s - Julie Gottlieb
6. The middlebrow and the making of a ‘new common sense’: Women’s voluntarism, Conservative politics and representations of womanhood - Clarisse Berthezène
7. Churchill, women, and the politics of gender - Richard Toye
8. 'The Statutory Woman whose Main Task was to Explore what Women were Likely to Think.' Margaret Thatcher and Women's Politics in the 1950s and 1960s - Krista Cowman
9. Conservatism, gender and the politics of everyday life, 1950s-1980s - Adrian Bingham
10. Feminist responses to Thatcher and Thatcherism - Laura Beers
11. The (feminised) contemporary Conservative party - Rosie Campbell and Sarah Childs
12. Conserving Conservative women: A view from the archives - Jeremy McIlwaine
13. Women2Win and the feminization of the UK Conservative party - Baroness Ann Jenkin with an introduction by Sarah Childs
Rethinking Right-Wing Women explores the institutional structures for and the representations, mobilisation, and political careers of women in the British Conservative Party since the late-nineteenth century.
Tory women have been effective and energetic party workers, and they have always been crucial for fund-raising, canvassing, electioneering work, and as voters at election time. The history of women in the British Conservative Party has not received the attention it deserves. Tory women have been under-researched for the paradoxical reason that they are off the radar for most male-centred party and political historians, and, due to their presumed anti-feminist views and complicity with the patriarchal establishment, they are not embraced by women’s and gender historians. Yet the Conservative Party has been highly successful with women at party level and within the electorate at large. This success helps to explain the party’s hegemony for much of the twentieth century, and now into the twenty first century.
Starting in the 1880s, and with the establishment of the Primrose League, women were politicised before they had the vote. Women’s successful mobilisation for the party before they became citizens and, later, in the wake of women’s suffrage in 1918 and the equal suffrage in 1928, played an instrumental role in the Conservative party’s transformation and reinvention from elite to mass democratic party. Leading scholars in this field have come together with the Conservative Party archivist and Baroness Jenkin of Women2win to consider the accommodation some Conservative women made with the evolving women’s emancipation agenda, and the strategies they pursued to make the party more gender balanced. This book also emphasises the importance of studying women’s leadership and their engagement in non- or even in anti-feminist political projects, and open up new terrains of research and enquiry.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Clarisse Berthezène is Lecturer at the University of Paris Diderot
Julie V. Gottlieb is Reader in Modern History at the University of Sheffield