Theme 3b) Women Flashcards

1
Q

Political Changes, 1918-1939:

1918 ROPA

A
  • Property owning women over 30 could vote.
  • Specifics meant only respectable and educated women could vote.
  • 43% of the electorate - Dec 1918: 8.4 million.
  • Mainly voted Tory.
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2
Q

Political Changes, 1918-1939:

1928 ROPA

A
  • Voting rights on the same terms as men (21+)

Overall:

  • Didn’t gain much of a voice due to very few female MPs.
  • Plus, they mainly voted in line with their husband.
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3
Q

Political Changes, 1918-1939:

Women in politics faced prejudice

A
  • Male dominated - never more than 5% female MPs (peak was 15MPs in 1931).
  • Petty restrictions - couldn’t use HofC dining room.
    “Boys school that allowed girls to visit”
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4
Q

Political Changes, 1918-1939:

Women in politics were drawn to labour

A
  • Labour were the party of social reform.
  • 9 female Labour MPs over this period.
  • 150,000 female members.
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5
Q

Women were more influential at _____ level. However, there were still ____ than ___ of councillors were women.

A

Women were more influential at local level. However, there were still less than 15% of councillors were women.

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6
Q

Employment Opportunities, 1918-1939

A
  • The employment gains of WW1 overturned - number of employed women returned to 1914 levels = 5.7 million.
  • Union deals meant that female employment lasted as long as the war did. They were alo paid less than the men they were replacing.
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7
Q

Employment - ‘Women’s Work’ (1918-1939)

A
  • Largest source of work for WC women = cook, cleaner, maid. - 1.25 million in service (1918).
  • Class split - WC in service roles whereas MC in clerical roles.
  • Clerical work was the biggest growth area for female employment - 1920s: 1 million typists.
  • Some employment in light industries but it was poorly paid - no incentive to pay higher because unemployment benefit was lower than men’s.
  • 2/3 of all WC women work done from home (baking etc.)
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8
Q

Employment - Middle Class Women (1918-1939)

A
  • Suffrage campaign resulted in the 1918 ROPA.
  • MC women didn’t want WC to be able to vote.
  • Some gradual improvements: Sex Disqualification (removal) Act, 1919 - Unis accepted women; civil service and law bans lifted.
  • Married women expected to stay at home - had to leave teaching profession once married.
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9
Q

What did WW2 offer?

A

Increase in opportunities:

  • Worked in factories.
  • Some were spies overseas.
  • Non-combat roles: cooks, drivers etc.
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10
Q

Practical benefits of WW2

A
  • Better pay
  • Acquired skills
  • Reached levels of importance and seniority not available in ordinary civilian life.
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11
Q

Economic Advancements, 1945-1951

A
  • Govt hoped women would go back to domesticity after the war.
  • Marriage bar began to be lifted:
    Teaching in 1944, Civil Service in 1946, and Bank of England in 1949.
  • However, many inherited the values of previous generations.
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12
Q

Economic Advancements, 1945-1951:

Inherited the values of previous generations

A
  • Didn’t see their work as part of their identity.
  • Need extra income to work.
  • Widespread desire to end work when married.
  • Careerists women seen as unusual - were thought to have failed as their primary role of mother and home-maker.
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13
Q

Economic Advancements, 1951-1979

A
  • Increased opportunities
  • End of the marriage bar meant women worked for longer - 50% of married women retaining their jobs by 1972.
  • Until the late 1950s, the norm was that women were paid on average 40% less than men.
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14
Q

Dagenham Sewing Machinists’ Strike, 1968

A
  • At Ford motor company
  • Decided to pay women making seat covers 15% less than men in equivalent jobs.
  • Went on strike for 3 weeks.
  • Barbara Castle negotiated a 7% increase.
  • However, equal pay not established until strike in 1984.
  • IMPACT: Raised issue of unequal pay and cause of Equal Pay Act.
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15
Q

Equal Pay Act, 1970

A
  • Labour manifesto commitment since 1959.
  • 1965: TUC agreed to support it.
  • Came into effect in 1970.
  • Prerequisite for joining EEC.
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16
Q

Sex Discrimination Act, 1975

A

Equal Opportunities Commission established:

  • Ensure women had legal protection against harassment and discrimination at work.,
  • Also that fair employment practices were observed.
  • Established tribunals to deal with this.
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17
Q

Political Advancement, 1951-1979

A
  • Didn’t progress significantly.
  • Amount of female MPs stayed between 20 and 30 (dipped in 1951 and 1979).
  • Prejudiced belief that women would be too preoccupied with domestic duties to fulfil MP role.
  • Rarely selected for cabinet - 1 or 2 was norm.
18
Q

Amount of MPs in 1951 and 1964

A

1951 was the lowest:
- 17 MPs - 2.7%
1964 was the highest:
- 29 MPs - 4.6%

19
Q

Family life and personal freedoms, 1918-1939

A
  • Role and status in society remained largely unchanged - seen as homemakers.
  • Few gains: divorce, birth control, self expression.
  • However, mainly experienced was by MC women - little positive change for WC women.
20
Q

Context behind divorce changes, 1918-1939

A
  • First act allowing women to divorce = 1857 Matrimonial Causes act.
  • Still major issues by the 1930s:
    = Couldn’t divorce via mutual consent.
    = Attempt to prove adultery was farcical.
    = Had to lie in court. If both were unfaithful, then no divorce.
21
Q

1937 Matrimonial Causes Act

A
  • Proposed by independent MP, AP Herbert.
  • Could divorce if either was unfaithful as well as desertion after 3 years (opposed by Catholic church).
  • Abdication crisis in 1936
22
Q

Divorce petitions before and after the 1937 act

A

Before 1937:
- 4,800 per year.
1951:
- 38,000 per year.

23
Q

Marie Stopes and birth control

A
  • 1921: Eugenicist Marie Stopes opens first birth control clinic.
  • Doctors and clergyman critical of “filthy” and “unnatural” clinics.
24
Q

Changes in birth control, 1918-1939

A
  • 1930: Govt decided it was essential local authorities could fund birth control clinics for health purposes.
  • Labour had voted against this in 1927.
  • CofE allowed married members to use birth control - Catholic church didn’t.
  • Condoms could be bought from chemists.
25
Q

1930: General Medical Council

A
  • Allowed doctors to give birth control advice to married couples.
  • However, WC women didn’t benefit.
26
Q

Self expression, 1918-1939

A
  • Women lived single lives in the 1920s and found new freedoms.
  • New clerical jobs allowed women to enjoy the interwar consumerism.
  • ‘Flapper girl’ trend grew.
27
Q

Interwar ‘flapper’ girls

A
  • They were exotic - portrayed as glamorous yet promiscuous.
  • Un-ladylike habits such as smoking and drinking - lived independent lives not dictated by men.
  • Underpinned by supply of disposable income - seldom experience by WC women.
28
Q

Depression impact on family life

A
  • In WC families, had a disproportionate impact on women.
  • They went without food to provide for their family.
  • Many lived below the poverty line
29
Q

Family life in the 1940s

A
  • WW2 involved majority of female population in war work or active service.
  • Many saw their families split up and experience rationing.
  • Fragmentation of the war meant they were glad to return to normality in their domestic role after war.
30
Q

Isolation of the 1950s housewife

A
  • 60% of those interviewed said they were experiencing boredom and loneliness.
  • National Housewives Register set up to cater for them.
31
Q

Explanations for the isolation in the 1950s

A
  • Changing attitudes to the role of women - not satisfied at home.
  • Growth of consumer society and educational opportunities - presented women with far greater choices than they had ever known.
32
Q

What was second wave feminism in the 1960s concerned with?

A
  • Domestic violence.
  • Birth control and reproductive rights.
  • Sexism in the workplace
  • Effect of patriarchal society on women and their mental health.
  • Porn and the objectification of women.
33
Q

New birth control legislation (1960s)

A
  • Contraceptive pill available on the NHS for married women (1961) - within a decade, millions using it.
  • The Abortion Act of 1967.
34
Q

Impact of the 1961 Contraceptive pill

A

Offered them new sexual freedoms - cause of the ‘permissive society’.
- Could focus on career and education.
- Women had ability to control their fertility.
- Having fewer children and having them later:
1971: 47% had a kid by 25
Fell to 25% by end of the decade

35
Q

Abortion Act, 1967

A
  • Proposed by Liberal MP, David Steel.
  • Decriminalised abortion.
  • Many supported it as there were lots of dangerous and illegal backstreet abortions (Up the Junction).
  • Abortion numbers increased - 149,746 per year by 1979.
36
Q

Marital changes - 1960s/70s

A
  • Change in roles of men and women at home - less patriarchal and shared housework more equally than before.
  • 1969 Divorce Reform Act - given royal assent in 1971:
    The irretrievable breakdown clause.
37
Q

Growing activism - 1960s/70s

A
  • Feminists associated the struggle for economic equality with wider issues of social inequality.
  • Number of feminist groups, literature and media began to appear more prominently.
  • 1970: Stormed Royal Albert Hall at Miss World contest and threw flower bombs at all male judging panel.
38
Q

When was the first Rape Crisis Centre opened?

A

1973

60 within the decade.

39
Q

What was opened in 1974?

A

National Women’s Aid Federation:

For victims of domestic abuse.

40
Q

Germaine Greer - ‘Female Eunuch’ (1970)

A
  • Men’s control of women led to them becoming trapped in suffocating gender roles, self loathing of their body + to compare themselves with other women.
  • Marriage had cut off women from embracing their sexuality.
  • Had a lasting influence.