Edwardian Ladies and Imperial Power

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A&C Black, 2000 M01 1 - 242 pages
This book evaluates the nature and impact of organized female imperialism in Edwardian Britain. It analyzes the nature of aristocratic and upper-middle-class ladies' involvement in imperialist associations, examining their relationship with male imperialist leagues. The attitudes of well-known female promulgators of imperialism and their relationships with male counterparts are explored, and the central role of women in the educational causes of imperialism is outlined. This brings into focus the importance of women's imperialist movements in relation to the broader women's movement, while informing the study of the wider exercise of imperial power and the role of women within it.>
 

Contents

Society Lifestyles
16
The Imperial Turn
36
Organized Ladies
56
Womens Work for Empire
73
Race and Empire
105
Education
126
Emigration
146
Imperialism the Womens Movement and the Vote
170
World War and After
193
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About the author (2000)

Julia Bush is head of the School of Social Studies at University College Northampton.

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