Cowman, Krista (2005) 'A footnote in history? Mary Gawthorpe, Sylvia Pankhurst, the suffragette movement and the writing of suffragette history. Women's History Review, 14 (3-4). pp. 447-466. ISSN 0961-2025
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
In 1931, the Suffragette Fellowship invited several ex-suffragetets to contribut biographical statements and material to their archive to create a 'Book of Suffragette Prisoners' which would introduce the women who had been to prison in pursuit of the vote. In response, the suffragette Mary Gawthorpe, a member of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) Committee between 1906 and 1911, deposited a series of testimonies describing her political activity beyond the WSPU. Gawthorpe's actions were partly prompted by her recent representation in Sylvia Pankhurst's text The Suffragetet Movement which dismissed her as having 'emigrated to America, [taken] up journalism and married'. This article draws on material from Mary Gawthorpe's papers, recently deposited in the Tamiment Library, New York, to investigate Gawthorpe's response to Pankhurst's text. From this perspective, it considers some of teh circumstances which provoke autobiographical responses to history.
Keywords: | women's suffrage, Historiography |
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Subjects: | V Historical and Philosophical studies > V390 History by Topic not elsewhere classified |
Divisions: | College of Arts > School of History & Heritage > School of History & Heritage (History) |
ID Code: | 8929 |
Deposited On: | 19 Apr 2013 11:14 |
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