1st Edition

Women & Radicalism 19thc V1

Edited By Mike Sanders Copyright 2004

    This important collection of writings is about, and by, women connected with social and political movements between 1799-1870. It also records the attitudes of the great radical reformers to the role of women in society and documents the vast cultural changes brought about by industrialisation. The collection draws together the following key material: Volume I contains an extensive collection of writings from 19th century periodicals, reflecting the high point of working class women's involvement in radical movements. This collection will appeal to anyone with an interest in women's history and Victorian studies

    General Introduction, VOLUME I: SPECIFIC CONTROVERSIES, Introduction, Employment, 1. The Female Advocate; or an Attempt to Recover the Rights Of Women from Male Usurpation (1799), Prophecy and Feminist Theology, 2. [from] A Dispute between the Woman and the Powers of Darkness (1802), 3. [from] Sound an Alarm in my Holy Mountain (1812), The Queen Caroline Affair, 4. The King’s Treatment of the Queen Shortly Stated to the People of England (1820), 5. Fair Play, or, Who Are the Adulterers, Slanderers and Demoralizers? (1820), The Pioneer, 6. ‘On Female Education’, The Pioneer (28 September 1833), 7. ‘To the Ladies in Union at Leicester’, The Pioneer (26 October 1833), 8. ‘A Voice from Leicester to The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (23 November 1833), 9. ‘To The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (23 November 1833), 10. ‘The Pioneer to Pioneera’, The Pioneer (30 December 1833), 11. ‘To the Editor of The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (11 January 1834), 12. ‘To the Mechanic’s Wife’, The Pioneer (11 January 1834), 13. ‘To the Females of the Working Class’, The Pioneer (8 February 1834), 14. ‘To the Bondswoman of Birmingham’, The Pioneer (22 February 1834), 15. ‘A Page for the Ladies’, The Pioneer (8 March 1834), 16. ‘To the Editor of The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (15 March 1834), 17. ‘Letter from an Initiated Weaver’s Wife’, The Pioneer (15 March 1834), 18. ‘A Page for the Lasses’, The Pioneer (15 March 1834), 19. ‘A Page for the Ladies’, The Pioneer (22 March 1834), 20. ‘A Page for the Ladies’, The Pioneer (29 March 1834), 21. ‘[Letter to the Tailors’ Union]’, The Pioneer (29 March 1834), 22. ‘Memorial of the Females of Nottingham and Vicinity’, The Pioneer (29 March 1834), 23. ‘A Page for the Ladies’, The Pioneer (5 April 1834), 24. ‘A Page for the Ladies’, The Pioneer (12 April 1834), 25. ‘Second Letter to the Tailors’, The Pioneer (12 April 1834), 26. ‘The Dorchester Victims’, The Pioneer (12 April 1834), 27. ‘To the Editor of The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (12 April 1834), 28. ‘To the Bonnet Makers of London, Hartford, and Bedford’, The Pioneer (12 April 1834), 29. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (26 April 1834), 30. ‘[Letter from P.A.S.]’, The Pioneer (26 April 1834), 31. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (3 May 1834), 32. ‘[Letter from a Unionist Tailor]’, The Pioneer (3 May 1834), 33. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (10 May 1834), 34. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (17 May 1834), 35. ‘To the Female Straw-Workers of London’, The Pioneer (17 May 1834), 36. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (24 May 1834), 37. ‘To the Straw-Bonnet Makers’, The Pioneer (24 May 1834), 38. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (31 May 1834), 39. ‘Woman’s Page’, The Pioneer (7 June 1834), 40. ‘To the Editor of The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (7 June 1834), 41. ‘The Straw Platters’, The Pioneer (7 June 1834), 42. The Pioneer (14 June 1834), 43. The Pioneer (21 June 1834), 44. The Pioneer (21 June 1834), 45. ‘To the Editor of The Pioneer’, The Pioneer (21 June 1834), 46. The Pioneer (28 June 1834), 47. The Pioneer (5 July 1834), The New Moral World, 48. ‘The Improvement of the Manners’, The New Moral World (31 January 1835), 49. ‘Flattery and Politeness’, The New Moral World (14 March 1835), 50. ‘For The New Moral World’, The New Moral World (11 April 1835), 51. ‘Female Improvement’, The New Moral World (13 June 1835), 52. ‘An Appeal to Women’, The New Moral World (15 August 1835), 53. ‘An Appeal to Women’, The New Moral World (22 August 1835), 54. ‘The Religion of the Millennium’, The New Moral World (6 February 1836), 55. ‘On Superstition’, The New Moral World (7 May 1836), 56. ‘Conversation of Sophy and Emma’, The New Moral World (4 June 1836), 57. ‘Woman’, The New Moral World (4 March 1837), 58. ‘Morality’, The New Moral World (6 January 1838), 59. ‘The Love of Knowledge’, The New Moral World (3 February 1838), 60. ‘Education: A Dialogue’, The New Moral World (21 April 1838), 61. ‘Commonsense and Human Love’, The New Moral World (30 June 1838), 62. ‘Conversation of Jane and Eliza’, The New Moral World (29 December 1838), 63. ‘Condition of Woman’, The New Moral World (6 April 1839), 64. ‘The Fable of the Guinea and the Fragment of Steel’, The New Moral World (6 April 1839), 65. ‘Man’s Legislation’, The New Moral World (25 May 1839), 66. ‘Women and the Laws’, The New Moral World (29 June 1839), 67. ‘Social Regeneration of Women’, The New Moral World (24 August 1839), 68. ‘On Forbearance’, The New Moral World (28 September 1839), 69. ‘The Moral Virtues’, The New Moral World (14 December 1839), 70. ‘The Principles of The New Moral World’, The New Moral World (29 February 1840), 71. ‘Festivity at the New Social Hall’, The New Moral World (25 March 1840), 72. ‘Female Influence and Training’, The New Moral World (3 November 1838), 73. ‘Education and Capabilities of Women’, The New Moral World (8 June 1839), 74. ‘Comparison of the Sexes’, The New Moral World (8 June 1839), 75. ‘Education of Woman’, The New Moral World (22 June 1839), 76. ‘Woman as She Is and as She Ought to Be’, The New Moral World (12 January 1839), 77. ‘Woman as She Is and as She Ought to Be’, The New Moral World (26 January 1839),  The National, Part contents...)

    Biography

    Mike Sanders