March is Women's History Month, and GALILEO has some great links to help you celebrate the heroines of the women's rights movement.
You can find the complete list of links here, or check out some of the highlights we've linked to below!
Encyclopedia Britannica Profiles 300 Women Who Changed the World (link)
A great collection of biographies, videos, maps and timelines of women around the world who changed history.
Women of Distinction in Georgia (link)
Biographies of famous Georgian women through history, including author Flannery O'Connor and Haines Institute founder Lucy Craft Laney.
Georgia Women's Movement Oral History Project (link)
Listen to spoken recordings of women discussing their role in the Georgia women's rights movement. Find interviews through the letter tabs at the top of the webpage.
Showing posts with label Women's History Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women's History Month. Show all posts
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Women's History Month: Suffragettes
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EMMELINE PANKHURST - (1858-1928). English Woman-suffrage Advocate. Mrs. Pankhurst Arrested Outside Buckingham Palace, London, While Trying To Present A Petition To King George V, 21 May 1914.. Fine Art. Encyclopædia Britannica Image Quest. Web. 7 Mar 2012.http://quest.eb.com.proxygsu-scre.galileo.usg.edu/images/140_1678023 |
Yesterday, thousands Georgians headed to their local voting booths to choose a Republican candidate. Voting is such a simple process that it's hard to imagine the hard-fought - and sometimes violent - battle that went into assuring that 50% of the current population could take part.
Even looking at just one suffragette's history shows a full range of the challenges and brutalities these protesters faced. Emmeline Pankhurst, from the photo above, was fifty years old the first time she was arrested. Over the course of her career, she would experience more arrests, degrading prison conditions, rocks and mud hurled at her in the streets, sexual assault from the British police, force feeding during hunger strikes, and numerous other abuses. She - and other members of the Women's Social and Political Union - endured these attacks just to achieve the simple liberty of participating in politics.
To learn more about these courageous women, you can check out:
- Profiles of Suffragettes on Biography.com (link)
- A digital collection of newspaper clippings, banners, and memorabilia from the suffragette movement in the Miller Suffrage Scrapbook (link)
- "Women Who Dare," a video profile of the women - including suffragettes - who helped shape America (link)
- Through GALILEO, you can access Britannica's online visual history of women's suffrage (link)
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