How Australia Led the Way: Dora Meeson Coates and British Suffrage - Paperback
Description
Soon after its foundation in 1901, the Commonwealth of Australia gave women the vote and the right to sit in parliament. Women’s suffrage was in fact a major aspect of the new nation’s progressive and international thinking. With great vigour, Australian women, including the Melbourne-born artist Dora Meeson Coates, ably involved themselves with the women’s movement in Great Britain. And with astounding presumption, the Australian parliament sent a Resolution to its lofty Westminster counterpart recommending that women’s suffrage be adopted. Here, Myra Scott vividly describes the increasingly violent women’s movement in England, the opposition to it by menfolk generally, the British Prime Minister’s personal bias against it, Australia’s part in this scenario, Meeson’s creative activism—and her rousing Suffrage Banner.
About the author:
Myra Scott completed a Bachelor of Arts and Masters degree at Melbourne University.
Product details:
Author: Myra Scott
Publisher: Australian Scholarly Publishing
Dimensions: 145 x 15 x 223 mm
Pages: 120
Format: Paperback
Publication date: 2020
ISBN: 9781925984675900000
Shipping and Delivery
Postage is charged as per Australia Post rates and is calculated based on the total weight of the order and destination delivery address. Read more
Collect in Store
Collect your order from Parliament Shop inside Australian Parliament House. 9 am – 5 pm Monday - Sunday. Read more
Returns and Refunds
Returns or exchanges can be requested within 30 days of receiving your item. To request a refund or exchange please contact parliament.shop@aph.gov.au. Read more