Britain, Ireland and Australia, 1890-1920
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Köp båda 2 för 987 kr"Shame and the Anti-Feminist Backlash succeeds in its larger aim of demonstrating the contested emotional terrains wrought by the suffrage debates. This telling analysis of three different sites widens our view of the complexity of anti-suffrage sentiments." Barbara Brookes, University of Otago "The book explores how shame and its synonyms, embarrassment and dishonour, articulated all three imperial sites of anti-suffrage struggle differently. The result is a history that turns, in compelling detail, on paradox, contradiction and irony As a whole, Shame and the Anti-Feminist Backlash makes an invaluable contribution to transnational history, the history of emotions and the feminist historiography of politics..." Jane Haggis, LSE Review of Books "Shame is a powerful emotiona behaviour regulator, a tool of expulsionand Sharon Crozier-De Rosa ably demonstrates its potency amongst three national communities, and between, in and around communities of women, in the period 1890 to 1920 The book divulges the complexities of societal expectations of women in the Empires metropole, its distant colonies and in Ireland Shame and the Anti-Feminist Backlash may well be a historical account of suffragist action and feminism, but it remains relevant as contemporary society struggles with inter-feminist shaming and notions of intersectionality where race, sexuality and class can combine with or eclipse gender." Fidelma Breen, Australasian Journal of Irish Studies
Sharon Crozier-De Rosa is a senior lecturer in history at the University of Wollongong.
Introduction 1. Shaming Unwomanly Women 2. Reversing the Shame of British Colonisation 3. Embarrassing the Imperial Centre 4. Shaming British-Australia 5. War and the Dishonourable British Feminist 6. Shaming Manhood to Embody Courage 7. The Shame of the Violent Woman. Conclusion