An Interview with June Purvis: The Demonisation of the Suffragettes

Today is the 103rd anniversary of Emily Davison’s death. I interviewed June Purvis on Emily Davison’s impact on the Suffragette movement and portrayals of women who protest.

Bluestocking Oxford

By Sophie Dowle.

I remember being fascinated by the suffragettes from a young age, devouring the ‘My Story’ book about a girl who joins the movement, and reading as many books as I could get my hands on (that weren’t beyond an eight-year-old’s reading ability). Something struck me about the narratives I was reading; the suffragists, with their peaceful methods of protest, were presented as preferable to the dangerous and violent suffragettes. And Emily Davison, who was dismissed as “crazed” or an outcast, often bore the brunt of the disapproval.

It is clear to me now that many of the writers of the books I was reading were shocked by the notion of women using violent methods of protest, thereby helping to perpetuate the narrative that women should be peaceful and timid.

June Purvis

My interest in the campaign for women’s suffrage in Britain continues to this day, and it…

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Singing for Peace in Mali

This article was written for and published by Oxford International Relations Society’s blog.

 

Music has a long history in Mali, and has been a part of the fabric of its history for thousands of years. From the griots, who were historians, storytellers, poets and musicians, to the tribal festivals and gatherings, to which poetry was an essential part, music and oral tradition played an essential role in ancient Malian identity and history.

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Interview: Khalid Abdel-Hadi

This article was written for and published by Cherwell Newspaper.

The founder of Jordan’s first LGBTQ+ magazine discusses the challenges facing the community

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Sudan: Ongoing International Repercussions

This article was written for and published by Oxford University’s International Relations Society Blog

 

Sudan’s internal conflicts were splashed across the front pages of leading international newspapers in 2011 when the country split in two, becoming Sudan and South Sudan. The tensions that produced this split are far from resolved, even if they no longer make front page news.

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Louise Dupin: Bluestocking’s 18th Century Predecessor

Bluestocking Oxford

By Sophie Dowle.

Long before Bluestocking Journal was publishing articles on great women, Louise Marie-Madeleine Dupin (1706-99), a French saloniste, compiled and began writing a book on the history of women: Ouvrage sur les femmes. Unfortunately, this work was never fully completed, and the many boxes of notes, drafts and copies that Madame Dupin had worked on were shelved, unpublished. Although this seminal work did not see the light of day, Madame Dupin and her feminist mission deserve to be remembered.

Louise Marie Madeline Fontaine Dupin was born in Paris in 1706. In 1722 she married Claude Dupin, whose success as a tax farmer and government official enabled him to buy the château of Chenonceau in 1733. At Chenonceau Madame Dupin cultivated a salon of artists and writers. Notable thinkers who frequented her salon included Voltaire (who nicknamed her “the goddess of beauty and music”), Fontenelle, Montesquieu, L’abbé de…

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