Podcasts about pankhursts

  • 12PODCASTS
  • 17EPISODES
  • 37mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Feb 3, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about pankhursts

Latest podcast episodes about pankhursts

History Rage
Beyond the Pankhursts: The True Story Behind Women's Rights to Vote with Shalina Patel

History Rage

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 65:20


EXPLICIT LANGUAGE WARNINGWelcome back to another fiery episode of History Rage! This week, host Paul Bavill is joined by history teacher and author Shalina Patel to delve into the often misunderstood world of Edwardian politics. Together, they tackle the myths surrounding the suffragette movement and the contributions of the Pankhursts.Debunking the Pankhurst Myth: Shalina passionately argues against the belief that the Pankhursts single-handedly won women the right to vote. She highlights the contributions of other organisations and individuals, including the suffragists, working-class women, and even men who supported women's suffrage.The Diverse Suffrage Movement:The NUWSS and WSPU: The peaceful suffragists led by Millicent Fawcett versus the militant suffragettes led by the Pankhursts.Regional and Religious Groups: From the Birmingham National Society for Women's Suffrage to the Jewish League for Women's Suffrage.Specialised Groups: The Women's Tax Resistance League, the Young Hot Bloods, and the Actresses' Franchise League.Working-Class Suffragettes: Shalina sheds light on the often overlooked contributions of working-class women like Selena Martin and Kitty Marion, who faced harsher treatment in prison compared to their middle-class counterparts.The Role of Men: Men also played a crucial role in the suffrage movement, with groups like the Men's Political Union for Women's Enfranchisement using their influence to support the cause.Guest Information:Get Shalina's book "The History Lessons" through the History Rage Bookshop or on Amazon.Follow Shalina on Twitter: @MS_PatelHistory.Join the conversation and share your historical vexations on Twitter @HistoryRage or with Paul Bavill @PaulBavill. Use the hashtag #HistoryRage.Support History Rage on Patreon for early episode access, the chance to submit questions to guests, prize draws, and the exclusive History Rage mug at www.patreon.com/historyrage.To catch up on all the rage from bygone times, visit our website www.historyrage.comIf you want to get in touch with History Rage, email us at historyragepod@gmail.comFollow History Rage on Social Media:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HistoryRageTwitter: https://twitter.com/HistoryRageInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/historyrage/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/historyrage.bsky.socialStay Angry, Stay Informed - History Rage Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

British Scandal
The Pankhursts | Cat and Mouse | 3

British Scandal

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2024 53:32


The Suffragettes need to strike the establishment at its core. They've tried using words. They've even tried violence. Finally, one mild day in June 1913, the group does make headlines. But the circumstances are tragic.Do you have a suggestion for a scandal you'd like us to cover? Or perhaps you have a question you would like to ask our hosts? Email us at britishscandal@wondery.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

British Scandal
The Pankhursts | Women at War | 2

British Scandal

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 53:02


The Pankhursts' movement has a new name. The Suffragettes. They're reinvigorated, but fresh-faced Prime Minister Asquith is determined to ignore them. So the Suffragettes resort to a shocking new tactic. One that could prove deadly.Do you have a suggestion for a scandal you'd like us to cover? Or perhaps you have a question you would like to ask our hosts? Email us at britishscandal@wondery.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

British Scandal
The Pankhursts | Deeds Not Words | 1

British Scandal

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 53:14


In 1918, women were allowed to run for Parliament in the UK. But most couldn't even vote. Ten years later, that finally changed. At the heart of that monumental shift was a family who wouldn't take no for an answer.Do you have a suggestion for a scandal you'd like us to cover? Or perhaps you have a question you would like to ask our hosts? Email us at britishscandal@wondery.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

History Extra podcast
Deeds not words | 2. Pankhurst family portrait

History Extra podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 28:51


One family – the Pankhursts – stood at the centre of the suffragette movement. They set the agenda and inspired their followers into action, but their ideas about political campaigning were not always aligned. From matriarchal figurehead Emmeline to chief strategist Christabel and firebrand socialist Sylvia, in the second episode of our new series on the suffragettes, Ellie Cawthorne explores the crucial roles the family played in the movement. Speaking to historians, she uncovers a story of inspiration, self-sacrifice and sibling rivalry. The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

A History of England
182. Spiral into violence

A History of England

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2024 14:58


We've reached a time of rising violence in English history. This episode concentrates firstly, and briefly, on the violence around the growing militancy of the trade union movement, worrying and ugly though not even remotely comparable to what was happening in the US at the time – these things are all relative… Next we return to the women's suffrage movement, to the growing divergence between the Suffragists of Millicent Fawcett's National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and the Suffragettes of Emmeline Pankhurst's Women's Social and Political Union, as the former stuck to the commitment to campaigning by legal means only and the latter moved increasingly towards violent actions. But the changes were also producing internal splits within the WSPU itself. We talk in this episode about what happened as the Pankhursts fell out with each other, leading to Adela Pankhurst's departure to Australia and Sylvia's expulsion from the WSPU, with her organisation emerging as the East London Federation of Suffragettes, wedded as firmly as ever to the cause of the working class and the Labour Party, and close to one of that party's most fervent supporters of votes for women, George Lansbury. Finally, we mention the one martyr's death for the Suffragette cause, that of Emily Davison, an iconic event in the campaign, though perhaps not quite what many people believe it to have been. Illustration: The funeral procession for Emily Davison. Postcar print by Ferdinand Louis Kehrhahn & Co, June 1913. National Portrait Gallery x45196 Music: Bach Partita #2c by J Bu licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License.

A History of England
174. Men disappointing women

A History of England

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2023 14:58


The first couple of years of the Liberal government elected in 1906 saw some achievements but also a great deal of frustration. The Unionist majority in the House of Lords annulled the Liberals' in the Commons. That blocked many of the government's initiatives. This period ended in August 1907 when Campbell-Bannerman, the Prime Minister, started a series of three heart attacks over the next fifteen months. Ultimately, they left him bedbound until, in April 1908, he became the only Prime Minister to die in 10 Downing Street. Meanwhile, in the women's movement, and in particular among the Suffragists of Millicent Fawcett's National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies, the NUWSS, dominated by Liberals, there had been great hopes of seeing progress with a Liberal government in power. They were dashed by Campbell-Bannerman's refusal to act. In part, this was down to party considerations, since both organisations were looking not for universal adult suffrage, but only equality of voting rights with men, on the existing basis. That would only enfranchise relatively well-off women, and they would be inclined to vote Conservative. Just as the NUWSS was linked to the Liberals, so the other main organisation, Emmeline Pankhurst's Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was closely bound to Labour. However, the Pankhursts – both Emmeline and her daughter and closest collaborator Christabel – began to lose faith in Labour from the very time they set up the WSPU. They favoured more militant action, such as intervening in public meetings and heckling speakers. The effectiveness of their campaigning in gaining publicity for the movement even persuaded Fawcett took move towards direct methods, for instance in organising the 3000-strong ‘Mud March' in 1907. But when HH Asquith, an opponent of women's suffrage, took over as Prime Minister from Campbell-Bannerman, and it became clear that the government wasn't going to advance the women's cause anytime soon, the two organisations' ways began to part. The SWPU began to explore far more militant tactics yet, which the NUWSS wouldn't be prepared to adopt. That, though, is for later episodes… Illustration: Christabel Pankhurst, by Ethel Wright, in a portrait exhibited in 1909 National Portrait Gallery 6921 Music: Bach Partita #2c by J Bu licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License.

Outrage and Optimism
193. Momentum VS Perfection: The Biggest Question in Climate Right Now? (Part Two)

Outrage and Optimism

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 83:59


Welcome back to part two of the mini-series Momentum vs Perfection! This week Tom Rivett-Carnac and Fiona McRaith deepen their exploration of the tensions in the climate movement outlined in episode one, and look to see how we might begin to move past the current impasse to accelerate action in this decisive decade. Journey with Tom, Fiona and their guests as they seek to answer the burning questions that they hope might unlock a trajectory to collaborative, joyful action. Some of these questions include:     Is a rebuilding of trust and understanding among the different actors key?  What part does the ‘moveable middle' play on the spectrum of momentum and perfection.  How do we ensure inclusivity and engagement of those whose voices are not currently represented in the wider movement?  How do these divisions present in the corporate world where the sense of urgency is well embedded but transition to action is hesitant?  What role can impartial actors and data play in pushing forward the momentum and perfection agendas? Can the capitalist spirit ever be used as a force to accelerate change as long as it is rooted in good intention?   Is connection and personal relationships key to building the sense of common purpose and approach we need now?   Helping Tom and Fiona to answer these questions is an incredible line-up of guest speakers:    Justin Forsyth, Co-Founder Count Us In, a radical collaboration of business, faith, sport, and civil society to inspire a billion people to take climate action. Farhana Yamin, Lawyer/Author/Activist & Keynote Speaker. Farhana is an internationally recognized environmental lawyer, climate change and development policy expert. She works part time at the Doc Society coordinating the Climate Reframe Project which seeks to amplify the voice of climate activists and experts from racialized minorities in the UK environment movement. Peter Bakker, President & CEO WBCSD, the global CEO-led community of the world's leading sustainable businesses working collectively to accelerate the system transformations needed for a net zero, nature positive, and equitable future. Sister True Dedication, Zen Buddhist monastic teacher in Thich Nhat Hanh's Plum Village Community Prof Helen Pankhurst CBE. CARE International, MMU, UOS. Senior Advisor at international humanitarian agency CARE International, women's rights activist, and the direct descendant of Emmeline Pankhurst and Sylvia Pankhurst, both leaders in the suffragette movement    NOTES AND RESOURCES    To learn more about our planet's climate emergency and how you can transform outrage into optimistic action subscribe to the podcast here.   Learn more about the Paris Agreement.   Fiona McRaith, Manager, Engagement & Delivery and Special Assistant to the President & CEO, Bezos Earth Fund LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram   Justin Forsyth LinkedIn | Twitter Count Us In Twitter | Instagram   Farhana Yamin LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram   Peter Bakker LinkedIn | Twitter  WBCSD – World Business Council for Sustainable Development LinkedIn | Twitter    Sister True Dedication Twitter | Instagram Plum Village LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook   Helen Pankhurst, women's rights activist and Senior Advisor, CARE International  LinkedIn | Twitter   CARE International Twitter | YouTube Learn more about Pankhursts's great-grandmother Emmeline Pankhurst and grandmother Sylvia Pankhurst, both leaders in the suffragette movement.  It's official, we're a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof! Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective   Please follow us on social media! Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn   -   Click Here to see the full show notes for this episode

History Cafe
#36 The Pankhursts didn't want the poor to get the vote - Ep 3 The Suffragettes

History Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 30:38


RE-RELEASING FOR WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH. The WSPU – the Pankhurst Suffragettes - begin in the Manchester Labour Party in the 1890s and learn their publicity-grabbing tactics from Labour. But these tactics turn out to have the worst possible effect – making women's votes even less likely than before. They are so bad, in fact, it makes you wonder whether the Suffragette leadership had some other agenda.

Great Lives
Lady Hale on Lady Rhondda

Great Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 27:49


Judge and former President of the Supreme Court, Lady Hale, chooses to nominate the suffragette, businesswoman, and founder of Time and Tide magazine, Margaret Haig Thomas, also known as Lady Rhondda. Born in 1883, Lady Rhondda was brought up an only child, in South Wales, by her feminist parents. She survived the sinking of the Lusitania and sat on the board of 33 companies, becoming, in 1926, the first and to-date only female president of the Institute of Directors. In 1927, the New York Tribune called her ‘the foremost woman of business in the British Empire'. She was also one of the most prominent British feminists of the inter-war years, marching with the Pankhursts and setting fire to a letterbox, for which she was briefly sent to Usk prison. Lady Rhondda was also the founder and editor of the pioneering, hugely influential weekly paper Time and Tide, which featured women's perspectives and essays by literary greats from Orwell to Bernard Shaw and Virginia Woolf. The Former President of the Supreme Court, Brenda Hale, believes Lady Rhondda's most important lesson is "that there are always new battles to be fought...You must never give up. You must always go on." With expert insight from Angela V. John, Honorary Professor of History. Produced by Ellie Richold for BBC Audio in Bristol

Distinct Nostalgia
Showcasing Original Drama - 'Sylvia' by Lesley Strachan examines the splits in Britain's leading suffragette family 'The Pankhursts'

Distinct Nostalgia

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2020 45:08


Sylvia sheds light on the little explored divide in the family at the heart of the suffragette movement in Britain in the early part of the 20th Century. It charts Sylvia Pankhurst’s split with her own family over the issue of class involvement in the struggle for women to get the vote - her belief that the suffrage movement should include working women was put into practice when she founded a toy factory in the East End of London. Here, she employed only women but paid them a man’s wage. Written by Lesley Strachan and directed by Colin Guthrie, Sylvia is a powerful exploration of the relationship between Sylvia, Emmeline and Christabel. Distinct Drama by MIM presents a Lesley Strachan ProductionSylviaDirected by Colin GuthrieWritten by Lesley StrachanCastSylvia Pankhurst - Helen CorbettEmmeline Pankhurst -Jill BattyNorah Smyth - Simona HughesJulia Scurr - Sheila BurbidgeDaisy Parsons - Jessica HammettRegina Hercbegova - Alina BaczynskaJessie Payne - Lesley StrachanChristabel Pankhurst -Louisa PeadAdela Pankhurst - Jessica HammettHerbert Asquith - Ian RecordonMr Selfridge - Richard BrentGeorge Lansbury - Martin SouthThe Reporter - Jonathan TilleyStanley Baldwin - Matthew FlexmanProductionRecording and Editing - Colin GuthrieFoley - Ruth SullivanOriginal music composed and performed by Tamara Douglas-MorrisWaltham Forest Brass: Claire Cheeter, Laurence Davison, David Easey, Katie Alam, Charlie Simpson, Bill Stockwell, Katie Defoe.Recorded on location in Islington, London. The Distinct Drama theme was composed by Rebecca Applin and Chris Warner.For more information about Sylvia go to distinctnostalgia.com Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/distinctnostalgia)

Vetandets värld
Kvinnors rösträtt i Sverige 100 år: Mytomspunnet tal från 1913 återfunnet (R)

Vetandets värld

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2019 19:29


I Oktober 1913 talade den radikala brittiska rösträttskvinnan Sylvia Pankhurst i Göteborg. Talet har varit mytomspunnet, men hittills har forskningen inte vetat vad hon sa. Nu är talet återfunnet. Det är fantastiskt! Det har varit så roligt att läsa och det är fantastiskt att det finns kvar, säger historikern Christina Florin som forskat mycket om den svenska rösträttsrörelsen, när Vetandets värld visat henne det återfunna talet. Pankhursts framträdande oroade makten eftersom den brittiska rösträttsrörelsen inte tvekade att ta till våld. Hennes ord i Göteborg 1913 ger en tydlig förklaring till varför de engelska rösträttskvinnorna tog till våld: När maktens män vägrar lyssna finns till slut bara en metod kvar, och det är våldets väg, förklarade Sylvia Pankhurst för de församlade göteborgare som kommit för att lyssna till hennes tal 1 oktober 1913. "Handling inte ord" blev suffragetternas motto. Men Pankhurst var noga med att betona att detta inte var en väg hon rekommenderade sina svenska rösträttssystrar. Inom kort kommer Riksarkivet ut med sin årsbok. I den finns en artikel om talet, om Frigga Carlberg och om Sylvia Pankhurst, skriven av arkivarien Karl-Magnus Johansson. Programmet är en repris från maj 2019. Programledare: Elisabeth Renström Producent: Camilla Widebeck camilla.widebeck@sverigesradio.se

Vetandets värld
Kvinnors rösträtt i Sverige 100 år: Mytomspunnet tal från 1913 återfunnet

Vetandets värld

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 19:29


I Oktober 1913 talade den radikala brittiska rösträttskvinnan Sylvia Pankhurst i Göteborg. Talet har varit mytomspunnet, men hittills har forskningen inte vetat vad hon sa. Nu är talet återfunnet. Det är fantastiskt! Det har varit så roligt att läsa och det är fantastiskt att det finns kvar, säger historikern Christina Florin som forskat mycket om den svenska rösträttsrörelsen, när Vetandets värld visat henne det återfunna talet. Pankhursts framträdande oroade makten eftersom den brittiska rösträttsrörelsen inte tvekade att ta till våld. Hennes ord i Göteborg 1913 ger en tydlig förklaring till varför de engelska rösträttskvinnorna tog till våld: När maktens män vägrar lyssna finns till slut bara en metod kvar, och det är våldets väg, förklarade Sylvia Pankhurst för de församlade göteborgare som kommit för att lyssna till hennes tal 1 oktober 1913. "Handling inte ord" blev suffragetternas motto. Men Pankhurst var noga med att betona att detta inte var en väg hon rekommenderade sina svenska rösträttssystrar. Inom kort kommer Riksarkivet ut med sin årsbok. I den finns en artikel om talet, om Frigga Carlberg och om Sylvia Pankhurst, skriven av arkivarien Karl-Magnus Johansson. Programledare: Elisabeth Renström Producent: Camilla Widebeck camilla.widebeck@sverigesradio.se

Bloody Brilliant Women, with Cathy Newman
Emmeline Pankhurst and the Suffrage Story

Bloody Brilliant Women, with Cathy Newman

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2019 32:39


In this episode we’ll meet Helena Swanwick, Philippa Fawcett, Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, Sophia Jex-Blake, and Emmeline Pankhurst, amongst many others. Through their stories we’ll explore women’s fight for equal education, the founding and influence of the Women’s Social and Political Union in 1903, and how the Pankhursts came to own the suffrage story. 'Bloody Brilliant Women: The Pioneers, Revolutionaries and Geniuses Your History Teacher Forgot to Mention' is available in paperback from Waterstones (po.st/BloodyBrilliantWomenWS) and Amazon (po.st/BloodyBrilliantWomen ), audiobook (po.st/iTunesBrilliantWomenAudio) and eBook (po.st/iTunesBrilliantWomenE) from Apple Books. Cathy Newman (Twitter): @cathynewman Cathy Newman (Instagram): cathynewmanc4 William Collins: @WmCollinsBooks

Standard Issue Podcast
SIM Ep 88 IWD 2: Dr Gill Sutherland on Millicent Fawcett

Standard Issue Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2018 27:52


Happy International Women’s Day – up the women!To celebrate the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women, we’re running a series of interviews with some kick-ass broads. Ayesha Hazarika talks to us about politics, comedy and how the two can go hand-in-hand; Laura Bates chats about her new book Misogynation and some truly startling facts and figues about everyday sexism. Historian and Newnham fellow Dr Gill Sutherland explains the important role Millicent Fawcett played in the suffrage movement and England rugby captain Sarah Hunter talks sport in general and rugby in particular. Here’s Dr Gill Sutherland, historian and Newnham College fellow explaining why Millicent Fawcett was such a big suffrage deal and very different to the Pankhursts. Just a heads-up: we recorded this in a room at Newnham that turned out to be a tad echoey.It seems exactly the right time to big up some charities doing excellent work for women, but desperately in need of your cash, should you have some to spare: Refuge, Rape Crisis, the Abortion Support Network, the Homeless Period, Women in Sport, The Samaritans and just putting a few extra items, including sanitary hygiene products, in your local food bank. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

History Extra podcast
The Pankhursts

History Extra podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2018 33:02


In the second of our two episodes marking the centenary of (some) women being granted the vote in Britain, historian June Purvis considers the role of the Pankhurst family in the long battle for female suffrage See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

britain pankhurst pankhursts june purvis
Writer's Routine
David deVire - Writer's Routine #7

Writer's Routine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2017 32:58


The author of a brand new book on gender equality shares his writing routine! David deVire has had a busy life. He's been an armed policer officer, worked with the University of Oxford on exams, and went from being a property millionaire to homeless... almost overnight. He's always had a fascination with people, the relationships between everyone and how we can learn more about the role of men and women in history. So, with all the free time that he had because of the homeless thing I mentioned earlier, he wrote about it. David interviewed hundreds of women from different backgrounds, class and ethnicity to find out what they really thought about gender equality, to write an informative look on what everyone's view is different. His book 'Tail of the Tigress' is just that. It covers everyone from Queen Victoria to the Pankhursts. It talks about the difference in the brains of men and women, and even how gender-stereotyped degree courses usually end up with a widely different salary. For today's Distinguished Diary, we get the wierd and wonderful writing routine of 'Catch-22' author, Joseph Heller. And if you love your music to be befitting of a coffee shop in southern Paris, and in a particularly jazzy style... what an intro track you've got on the way. @writerspod writersroutine@gmail.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.