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Catalog für die Ausstellung österr. Frauen-Arbeiten. Welt-Ausstellung 1873 in Wien
(Austrian National Library); edited by Aglaia von Enderes, 1836-1883 (Vienna, Vienna State: Central-Commission Publisher, 1873), 71 page(s)
Title: Catalogue for the Exhibition of Austrian Women's Work: World Exhibition 1873 in Vienna. Description: The document is a catalogue published on the occasion of the Vienna World Exhibition of 1873. The catalogue gives an introduction on women's work and is followed by a list of producers and goods, which were...
Sample
(Austrian National Library); edited by Aglaia von Enderes, 1836-1883 (Vienna, Vienna State: Central-Commission Publisher, 1873), 71 page(s)
Description
Title: Catalogue for the Exhibition of Austrian Women's Work: World Exhibition 1873 in Vienna. Description: The document is a catalogue published on the occasion of the Vienna World Exhibition of 1873. The catalogue gives an introduction on women's work and is followed by a list of producers and goods, which were crafted by women. One pavilion of the Vienna World Exhibition was devoted exclusively to women's work in the Habsburg Monarchy. The exp...
Title: Catalogue for the Exhibition of Austrian Women's Work: World Exhibition 1873 in Vienna. Description: The document is a catalogue published on the occasion of the Vienna World Exhibition of 1873. The catalogue gives an introduction on women's work and is followed by a list of producers and goods, which were crafted by women. One pavilion of the Vienna World Exhibition was devoted exclusively to women's work in the Habsburg Monarchy. The exponents were presented in four categories: schools, dilettantes, house industry, factory industry. In advance of the exhibition, commissions in Vienna, Ragusa, Graz, Görtz, Innsbruck, Bolzano, Brno, Olomouc, Opava (Troppau), Krakow, Chernivtsi, Trieste, Ljubljana collected 3,216 “female,” hand-craft products and industrial manufacturing products. A selection of this collection was presented in the pavilion devoted to women's work. As mentioned by Aglaia von Enderes in the introduction, the exhibition of women's art and craft served the purpose to visualise and raise attention on the work of women. The author of catalogue, Aglaia von Enderes (1834–1883) was a writer and active in the Wiener Frauen-Erwerb-Verein [Viennese Women's Acquisition Association]. She wrote several articles in the journal Politische Frauen-Zeitung [Political Women Journal] about the Viennese Women's Acquisition Association. Keywords: Women Interacting with Women, Social Movements, and Other Actors Beyond Empire; Women and Nation within Empire; National Identity; Social Reform; Political Activism; Multi-Ethnic Participation in Social Movements; Work and Class Identity; Labor Standards; Habsburg Empire; World Exhibition; Austria
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Book
Contributor
Aglaia von Enderes, 1836-1883
Date Published / Released
1873
Publisher
Central-Commission Publisher
Topic / Theme
Social Reform and Political Activism, Work and Class Identity, Women, Colonization, Empire, and Post Coloniality, Political and Human Rights, National Identity, Rights to Work, Empire and Internationalism, Social and Cultural Rights, Multi-Ethnic Participation in Social Movements, Austrians
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Changes in Li Village
written by Zhao Shuli, 1906-1970 (Beijing, Beijing Shi: Foreign Languages Press, 1953), 227 page(s)
Sample
written by Zhao Shuli, 1906-1970 (Beijing, Beijing Shi: Foreign Languages Press, 1953), 227 page(s)
Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Book
Contributor
Gladys Yang, 1919-1999
Author / Creator
Zhao Shuli, 1906-1970
Date Published / Released
1953
Publisher
Foreign Languages Press
Topic / Theme
Work and Class Identity, Women and Development, Political and Human Rights, Class Discrimination, Agriculture, Social and Cultural Rights, Japanese, Chinese, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
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Child Care in Urban and Rural Peru: A Report Presented to the Overseas Education Fund of the League of Women Voters
written by Jeanine Anderson, fl. 1979, Blanca Figueroa Galup, fl. 1979 and Ana Mariñez, fl. 1979 (Lima, Lima Department: National League of Women Voters. Overseas Education Fund, 1979), 113 page(s)
Sample
written by Jeanine Anderson, fl. 1979, Blanca Figueroa Galup, fl. 1979 and Ana Mariñez, fl. 1979 (Lima, Lima Department: National League of Women Voters. Overseas Education Fund, 1979), 113 page(s)
Collection
Women and Social Movements, International
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Government/institutional document
Author / Creator
Jeanine Anderson, fl. 1979, Blanca Figueroa Galup, fl. 1979, Ana Mariñez, fl. 1979
Date Published / Released
1979
Publisher
National League of Women Voters. Overseas Education Fund
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Circular Letter, 21 April 1958, [Attachment: Geeta Mukheryee (Indian Representative in the WIDF), "About the Movement of Indonesian Women,"...
written by Geeta Mukherjee, 1924-2000 (Women's International Democratic Federation, 1958), 6 page(s)
This letter was accompanied by an article about GERWANI that was written by Mrs. Geeta Mukheryee, the WIDF representative for India, based on her discussions with Suwarti Bintang Suradi. At that time, the latter was a member of the WIDF Secretariat, as well as the Constituent Assembly of Indonesia. Both women were...
Sample
written by Geeta Mukherjee, 1924-2000 (Women's International Democratic Federation, 1958), 6 page(s)
Description
This letter was accompanied by an article about GERWANI that was written by Mrs. Geeta Mukheryee, the WIDF representative for India, based on her discussions with Suwarti Bintang Suradi. At that time, the latter was a member of the WIDF Secretariat, as well as the Constituent Assembly of Indonesia. Both women were based in East Berlin at the WIDF Secretariat.
KEYWORDS: East Berlin; Geeta Mukheryee; GERWANI; Indian-Indonesian relations; Suwarti Bi...
This letter was accompanied by an article about GERWANI that was written by Mrs. Geeta Mukheryee, the WIDF representative for India, based on her discussions with Suwarti Bintang Suradi. At that time, the latter was a member of the WIDF Secretariat, as well as the Constituent Assembly of Indonesia. Both women were based in East Berlin at the WIDF Secretariat.
KEYWORDS: East Berlin; Geeta Mukheryee; GERWANI; Indian-Indonesian relations; Suwarti Bintang Suradi; WIDF Secretariat
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Government/institutional document
Author / Creator
Geeta Mukherjee, 1924-2000
Date Published / Released
21 April 1958, 1958
Publisher
Women's International Democratic Federation
Person Discussed
Suwarti Bintang Suradi, fl. 1958
Topic / Theme
Political and Human Rights, Work and Class Identity, Women and Education, Indigenous Women, Family Rights, Labor Standards, Access to Primary Education/Literacy, Social and Political Leadership, Indonesians, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright @ 1958 by Women's International Democratic Federation
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La Citoyenne, No. 4, 6 mars 1881
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 4, March 6, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881, originally published 1881), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 4, March 6, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881, originally published 1881), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert refutes objections to woman suffrage on grounds of differing gender roles, arguing that there is no inherent conflict between exercise of political rights and fulfillment of domestic duties. Another major article protests the sub-subsistence wages of working women. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
1881, 06 March 1881
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Political and Human Rights, Work and Class Identity, Family Rights, Rights to Wages, Suffrage, Equal Rights for Women, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 6, 20 mars 1881
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 6, March 20, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 6, March 20, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert counters the argument against women’s voting on grounds that unlike most (though not all) men, they did not serve their country in military duties. She points out that more women give their lives paying the “maternity tax” than men the “blood tax,” though they would happily serve as soldiers if that assured them civic rights. Other articles deal with women’s work in the garment industry. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
March 1881, 1881
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Work and Class Identity, Political and Human Rights, Rights to Work, Family Rights, Suffrage, Equal Rights for Women, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 24, 24 juillet 1881
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 24, July 24, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 24, July 24, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert accuses men of monopolizing not only political but also economic power, thus placing women and their children at the mercy of husbands, who often abandon them. She argues that the “invasion” of “men’s trades” in order to raise women’s wages, and the economic independence of women, are essential to the welfare of the nation. Other articles discuss women and higher education. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
24 July 1881, 1881
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Women and Education, Political and Human Rights, Work and Class Identity, Access to Higher Education, Family Rights, Rights to Wages, Social and Cultural Rights, Equal Rights for Women, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 41, 21-27 novembre 1881
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 41, November 21-27, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 41, November 21-27, 1881 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1881), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert praises the attorney general for joining women in protesting the inequity of the double standard of punishment for adultery whereby guilty women could be imprisoned for up to two years while men who committed the crime even in the conjugal home merely paid a fine. She also addresses directly the president of the ministerial council, asking that when two newly created ministries were staffed that positions be granted to women in proportion to their share of the population. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
21 November 1881, 1881
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Work and Class Identity, Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Political and Human Rights, Rights to Work, Marital Status, Equal Rights for Women, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 49, 16-22 janvier 1882
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 49, January 16-22, 1882 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1882), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 49, January 16-22, 1882 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1882), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Antonin Lévrier (Auclert’s romantic partner and future husband, and a regular contributor to La Citoyenne) wrote in “Les ouvrières en chaussures” (“Women Shoe Workers”) of the difficult working conditions and low pay of women shoe workers. “Liberté” reports the police dispersion of several hundred people commemorating the anniversary of the death of Auguste Blanqui, and the subsequent trial and unjust conviction of two female participants: Louise Michel and Madame Poirier. “Siam” discussed the lives of the wife and concubines of the King of Siam (modern day Thailand).
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
16 January 1882, 1882
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Peace, International Governance, and International Law, Political and Human Rights, Work and Class Identity, Marital Status, Equal Rights for Women, Rights to Work, Rights to Wages, Thai, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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La Citoyenne, No. 56, 5-11 mars 1882
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 56, March 5-11, 1882 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1882), 4 page(s)
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped...
Sample
edited by Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914, in La Citoyenne, No. 56, March 5-11, 1882 (Paris, Ile-de-France: La Citoyenne, 1882), 4 page(s)
Description
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to addres...
La Citoyenne was a French feminist newspaper, founded, funded, and edited by Hubertine Auclert, with the primary aim of promoting women’s suffrage. Auclert, the leader of France’s fledgling suffrage movement from 1880 to her death in 1914, lived in Algeria from 1888-1892. This experience intensified and shaped her already existing interest in the colony. La Citoyenne, published from 1881-1891, was the first French feminist newspaper to address questions of empire. In this issue, Auclert refutes the argument that by becoming enfranchised citizens women would lose respect and cease to be deemed honorable, or “virtuous.” She compares this interpretation of virtue to “chrysocale,” a metal alloy that resembles gold but is nothing but cheap metal. Virtue, she says, is synonymous not with servitude but with liberty. Other articles concern the recently proposed legislation to limit working hours for women and the double standard of adultery. Abstract created by Marilyn J. Boxer.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Hubertine Auclert, 1848-1914
Date Published / Released
05 March 1882, 1882
Publisher
La Citoyenne
Series
La Citoyenne
Topic / Theme
Work and Class Identity, Political and Human Rights, Rights to Work, Equal Rights for Women, Social and Cultural Rights, French, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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