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Lady Constance Lytton (1869-1923) was the most unlikely of suffragettes. One of the elite, she was the daughter of a Viceroy of India and a lady in waiting to the Queen. She grew up in the family home of Knebworth and in embassies around the world. For forty years, she did nothing but devote herself to her family, denying herself the love of her life and possible careers as a musician or a reviewer. Then came a chance encounter with a suffragette. Constance was intrigued; witnessing Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst on trial convinced her of the urgent necessity of votes for women and she went…mehr
Lady Constance Lytton (1869-1923) was the most unlikely of suffragettes. One of the elite, she was the daughter of a Viceroy of India and a lady in waiting to the Queen. She grew up in the family home of Knebworth and in embassies around the world. For forty years, she did nothing but devote herself to her family, denying herself the love of her life and possible careers as a musician or a reviewer. Then came a chance encounter with a suffragette. Constance was intrigued; witnessing Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst on trial convinced her of the urgent necessity of votes for women and she went to prison for the cause as gleefully as any child going on a school trip. But, once jailed, Constance soon found that her name and her connections singled her out for unwelcome special treatment. By now, 1909, the suffragettes were hunger striking and the government had retaliated with force-feeding. The stories that began to leak out - of bungled operations, of dirty tubes, of screams half-heard through brick walls, of straitjackets and handcuff s - outraged the suffragettes. Constance decided on her most radical step yet: to go to prison in disguise. Taking the name Jane Warton, she cut her hair, put on glasses and ugly clothes and got herself arrested in Liverpool. Once in prison, she was force-fed eight times before her identity was discovered and she was released. Her case became a cause célèbre, with debate raging in The Times and questions being asked in the House of Commons. Lady Constance Lytton became an inspiration and, in the end, a martyr. In this extraordinary new biography, Lyndsey Jenkins reveals for the first time the fascinating story of the woman who abandoned a life of privilege to fight for women's rights.
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Autorenporträt
LYNDSEY JENKINS began writing the life of Constance Lytton during her master's degree in biography and creative non-fiction at the University of East Anglia. She was a civil servant for ten years, spending seven years as a speechwriter for some of the UK's leading politicians. She has a first-class degree in history and politics from the University of Warwick and earned a distinction in her master's degree from the London School of Economics, where she won the Richard Titmuss Prize for social policy. With Paul Apowida, she co-authored the book Spirit Boy about the spirit child phenomenon in Ghana. She is now studying for a doctorate in history at the University of Oxford, where she is based at the Centre for Life-Writing, Wolfson College. Lyndsey is interested in the lives of pioneering British women of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She is currently writing a biography of the Kenney sisters, seven working-class suffragettes.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements vii Foreword by Dr Helen Pankhurst xiii Prologue xvii Chapter One: Diplomat's Daughter 1 Chapter Two: A Misfit among Eccentrics 25 Chapter Three: The Ponsonbys 41 Chapter Four: The Cause 75 Chapter Five: The Pankhursts 99 Chapter Six: Holloway 117 Chapter Seven: Militant 131 Chapter Eight: Becoming Jane 153 Chapter Nine: Conciliation 167 Chapter Ten: Betrayal 183 Chapter Eleven: Paralysis 195 Chapter Twelve: The Price of Victory 217 Afterword 239 Notes 243 Sources 265 Index 273
Acknowledgements vii Foreword by Dr Helen Pankhurst xiii Prologue xvii Chapter One: Diplomat's Daughter 1 Chapter Two: A Misfit among Eccentrics 25 Chapter Three: The Ponsonbys 41 Chapter Four: The Cause 75 Chapter Five: The Pankhursts 99 Chapter Six: Holloway 117 Chapter Seven: Militant 131 Chapter Eight: Becoming Jane 153 Chapter Nine: Conciliation 167 Chapter Ten: Betrayal 183 Chapter Eleven: Paralysis 195 Chapter Twelve: The Price of Victory 217 Afterword 239 Notes 243 Sources 265 Index 273
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