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Recent Posts
- My review of Malgorzata Mirga-Tas; Romani textile artist and activist exhibition and book
- My interview with Rose Hunter of the North Staffs Miners Wives Action Group
- My review of “The Wearing of the Green a Political History of the Irish in Manchester” by Michael Herbert
- My review of “Reasons to Rebel My Memories of the 1980s” by Sheila Rowbotham
- My review of “Mistress of Montmartre A Life of Suzanne Valadon” by June Rose
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Category Archives: book review
My review of “Trico A Victory to Remember” by Sally Groves and Vernon Merritt
Why is it some strikes, many of them defeats for the labour movement, are constantly being replayed ie Miners Strike, Grunwicks and Ford Dagenham women but successful strikes such as Trico have been forgotten. One of the big problems … Continue reading
My review of “I Have No Regrets: Diaries, 1955-1963” Brigitte Reimann
Brigitte Reimann was an East German writer and an avid chronicler of her own life through her diaries. In this new book we follow her as she becomes a successful writer, but at a turbulent time for her … Continue reading
My review of “High Wages” Dorothy Whipple
High Wages is set in 1912 and describes the lives of many young women of that era who had limited educational and career options. Jane Carter, the heroine of this novel, is a Northern young woman who has to … Continue reading
My review of “You Can’t Kill the Spirit!” Houghton Main Pit Camp, South Yorkshire;the untold story of the women who set up camp to stop pit closures
This is the inspiring story of a group of working class women who decided to fight to stop further pit closures seven years after the momentous Miner’s Strike of 1984-5. They set up seven women’s pit camps outside the … Continue reading
Posted in book review, education, feminism, human rights, labour history, political women, Socialist Feminism, trade unions, Uncategorized, women, working class history, young people
Tagged Houghton Main Pit Camp, Miner's Strike 1984-5, Sheffield Women against Pit Closures, You Can't Kill the Spirit
3 Comments
My review of “Our Woman in Havana Reporting Castro’s Cuba” Sarah Rainsford
Sarah Rainsford was the BBC’s correspondent in Cuba from 2011-14. Known as “Our woman in Havana” it feels like a throwback to a time when the UK was a world power that needed to send out foreign correspondents like … Continue reading
Posted in book review, Communism, human rights, Uncategorized
Tagged Cuba, Graham Greene, Ruby Hart Phillips, Sarah Rainsford
2 Comments
My review of “Algiers, Third World Capital Freedom Fighters, Revolutionaries, Black Panthers” Elaine Mokhtefi
Elaine Mokhtefi was a key person for the Black Panther movement in Algiers, but her own story, added to the end of this book, is as important as it sheds light on how a young Jewish woman from small … Continue reading
Posted in biography, book review, Communism, human rights, political women, Uncategorized, women, young people
Tagged Algiers, Black Panthers, Elaine Mokhtefi, Eldridge Cleaver, FLN
1 Comment
My review of “Moving Histories Irish Women’s Emigration to Britain from Independance to Republic” Jennifer Redmond
MORE Irish women than Irishmen have over the years emigrated from Ireland. In this new history of Ireland from the 1920s to the 1950s Jennifer Redmond uses an important array of new sources to tell their story. This includes … Continue reading
Posted in book review, Catholicism, Communism, education, feminism, Ireland, Irish second generation, labour history, North of Ireland, political women, trade unions, Uncategorized, women, working class history, young people
Tagged Across the Water, Connolly Association, Irish Women in Britain, Joanne O'Brien, Marie McAdam, Mary Lennon
1 Comment
My review of “Across the Water Irish Women’s Lives in Britain” (1988) Mary Lennon Marie McAdam Joanne O’Brien
This unique history of the role of Irish women in Britain was published in 1988: Across the Water Irish Women’s Lives in Britain. It was produced by three women, none of whom were academics, all of them had … Continue reading
Posted in book review, Catholicism, Communism, education, feminism, human rights, Ireland, Irish second generation, labour history, Manchester, North of Ireland, political women, Socialist Feminism, trade unions, Uncategorized, women, working class history, young people
Tagged Across the Water Irish Women's Lives in Britain, Jenneba Sie Jalloh, Joanne O'Brien, Marie McAdam, Mary Lennon, Miriam James
2 Comments
My review of”Why Women have better sex under Socialism” Kristen R. Ghodsee
In 1925 Mary Quaile, Manchester Irish trade unionist and one of the first women to be elected onto the Trades Union Congress, led a women-only delegation to the Soviet Union to investigate the lives of women and children in … Continue reading
My review of “Wages for Housework A History of an International Feminist Movement 1972-77” by Louise Toupin (2018)
In this new and fascinating book about the Wages for Housework campaign we are looking back to a period of history when radical women were redefining the nature of women’s work and challenging the role of women in society. The … Continue reading