The Scottish suffragettes and the press

Author(s)

    • Pedersen, Sarah

Bibliographic Information

The Scottish suffragettes and the press

Sarah Pedersen

(Palgrave studies in the history of the media)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2017

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book approaches the Scottish women's suffrage campaign from the point of view of the popular press. It investigates how the press engaged with the women's suffrage movement; how suffragettes were portrayed in newspapers; and how different groups attempted to use the press to get their message into the public sphere. Scottish suffrage campaigners acknowledged the need for press coverage from the start of the campaign in the 1870s, but the arrival of the militant suffragettes completely transformed newspaper coverage. The Scottish newspapers were particularly interested in suffragette activities during local by-elections and their hounding of local anti-suffrage MPs such as Herbert Asquith. The book also investigates the impact of the First World War on the movement.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments.- Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The situation in Scotland before the arrival of the Suffragettes.- Chapter 3: The early years of the Suffragette campaign - watching from Scotland.- Chapter 4: First phase of the campaign in Scotland.- Chapter 5: A Scottish WSPU.- Chapter 6: Hunger-strikers, anti-suffragists and celebrity.- Chapter 7: Violent militancy comes to Scotland.- Chapter 8: Scottish Suffragettes during the War.- Chapter 9: Conclusion.- Bibliography.- Index

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