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Janis Lomas

    Women and Evacuation in the Second World War
    Bovril,Whisky and Gravediggers
    A History of Women in 100 Objects
    How the Pershore Plum Won the Great War
    The Acceptable Face of Feminism
    The Home Front in Britain
    • The Home Front in Britain

      • 268 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      The Home Front in Britain explores the British Home Front in the last 100 years since the outbreak of WW1. Case studies critically analyse the meaning and images of the British home and family in times war, challenging prevalent myths of how working and domestic life was shifted by national conflict.

      The Home Front in Britain
    • The British Women's Institute is more often associated with jam and Jerusalem than radical activity, but in this book Maggie Andrews explores the WI's relationship with feminism from the formation of the organisation in 1915 up to the eve of British feminism's renaissance in the late 1960s.

      The Acceptable Face of Feminism
    • How the Pershore Plum Won the Great War

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      This book explores the lives of the people of Pershore and the surrounding district in wartime, drawing on their memories, letters, postcards, photographs, leaflets and recipes to demonstrate how their hard work in cultivating and preserving fruit and vegetables helped to win the Great War.

      How the Pershore Plum Won the Great War
    • Spanish Flu' killed more than 50million people and afffected millions more across the globe between 1918 and 1920. Soldiers, POWs and workers in war- industries all fell victim to this pandemic which brought fear and death to villages, towns and cities on the homefront, even after the guns of the First World War battlefields had fallen silent.

      Bovril,Whisky and Gravediggers
    • Groups of young evacuees, standing on railway stations with gas masks and cardboard suitcases have become an iconic image of wartime Britain, but their histories have eclipsed those of women whose domestic lives were affected. This book explores the effects of this unparalleled interference in the domestic lives of women, looking at the impact on everyday experience and on ideas of femininity, domesticity and motherhood. Maggie Andrews argues that wartime evacuation is important for understanding the experience and the contested meanings of domesticity and motherhood in the 20th century. As this book shows, evacuation represents a significant and unrecognised area of women's war work, and precipitated the rise of competing public discourses about domestic labour and motherhood.

      Women and Evacuation in the Second World War
    • Explore fifteen campaigns that changed the lives of twenty-first-century women and beyond.

      Political Women