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Downloadable Video, 2014
Current format, Downloadable Video, 2014, , All copies in use.
Downloadable Video, 2014
Current format, Downloadable Video, 2014, , All copies in use. Offered in 0 more formats
In Part 2 of this series on the struggle for women's rights, historian Amanda Vickery examines how women gradually changed their lives and opportunities during Victoria's reign, despite successive governments resisting female enfranchisement. Vickery introduces us to the mistress of a prime minister, who lost custody of her own children but won the first piece of modern feminist legislation-child custody rights for mothers. We meet a passionate campaigner who raised the age of consent and overthrew laws against prostitutes; a Cambridge undergraduate who proved that girls could be better at math and undermined centuries of male-only Cambridge education; and Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters, who decided that after years of women campaigning for the vote, it was now time to resort to deeds rather than words.
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