Table of Contents for Women’s Emancipation Movements in the Nineteenth Century
Table of Contents for Women’s Emancipation Movements in the 19th Century
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Part I.Introduction
1.Concepts and Issues, by Sylvia Paletschek and Bianka Pietrow-Ennker
2.Challenging Male Hegemony: Feminist Criticism and the Context for Women’s Movements in the Age of European Revolutions and Counterrevolutions, 1789-1860, by Karen Offen
Part II.Western and Central Europe
3.Recovering Lost Political Cultures: British Feminisms, 1860-1900, by Jane Rendall
4.History and Historiography of First-Wave Feminism in the Netherlands, 1860-1922, by Mineke Bosch
5.The French Feminist Movement and Republicanism, 1868-1914, by Florence Rochefort
6.The Women’s Movement in Germany in an International Context, by Ute Gerhard
Part III.Northern Europe
7.Modernity and the Norwegian Women’s Movement from the 1880s to 1914: Changes and Continuities, by Ida Blom
8.Gender and Feminism in Sweden: The Fredrika Bremer Association, by Ulla Manns
Part IV.East Central and Eastern Europe
9.The Emancipation of Women for the Benefit of the Nation: The Czech Women’s Movement, by Jitka Malecková
10.Sisters or Foes: The Shifting Front Lines of the Hungarian Women’s Movements, 1896-1918, by Judith Szapor
11.The Polish Women’s Movement to 1914, by Bogna Lorence-Kot and Adam Winiarz
12.Feminism and Equality in an Authoritarian State: The Politics of Women’s Liberation in Late Imperial Russia, by Linda Edmondson
Part V.Southern Europe
13.The Rise of the Women’s Movement in Nineteenth-Century Spain, by Mary Nash
14.National and Gender Identity in Turn-of-the-Century Greece, by Eleni Varikas
Part VI.Comparative Views
15.British and American Feminism: Personal, Intellectual, and Practical Connections, by Christine Bolt
16.Women’s Emancipation Movements in Europe in the Long Nineteenth Century: Conclusions, by Sylvia Patelschek and Bianka Pietrow-Ennker
Notes
Supplementary Bibliography
Index of Names