妇女选举权、政治经济和跨大西洋生育罢工运动,1911-1920

Tania Shew
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引用次数: 0

摘要

二十世纪的前二十年见证了一场有意义的跨国运动的发展,该运动利用生育罢工来争取妇女权利。在英美背景下,这场运动与妇女选举权运动密切相关。它是由妇女参政论者、新马尔萨斯主义者和计划生育活动家组成的网络领导的,他们有共同的文学和个人联系,这使得他们的思想在1911年至1920年间在大西洋上纵横交错。尽管跨大西洋生育罢工从未大规模实施,解释了它在现有史学中几乎完全缺失的原因,但本文使用性别化的思想史框架来拼凑运动背后的思想,文章认为,这些思想破坏了思想史中对新马尔萨斯主义和社会主义女权主义的既定理解。对生育罢工的支持是基于对工人阶级集体行动的力量的信任,对生产工人和“生殖”工人的经济剥削的审查,以及对国家参与这些问题的有效性的相应不信任。生育罢工者将集体主义、个人主义、社会主义和女权主义思想交织在一起,破坏了20世纪早期政治思想中对社会主义和妇女参政主义、集体主义和个人主义二元对立的传统史学描述。
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Women's Suffrage, Political Economy, and the Transatlantic Birth Strike Movement, 1911–1920
Abstract The first two decades of the twentieth century saw the development of a meaningful transnational movement to employ birth strikes in the fight for women's rights. In an Anglo-American context, this movement was intimately tied to the women's suffrage campaign. It was led by a network of suffragists, Neo-Malthusians, and birth control campaigners who shared literary and personal ties which allowed their ideas to criss-cross the Atlantic between 1911 and 1920. Although the transatlantic birth strike was never implemented on a significant scale, explaining its almost total absence within existing historiography, this article uses a gendered intellectual history framework to piece together the ideas behind the movement which, the article argues, disrupt established understanding of Neo-Malthusianism and socialist-feminism within intellectual histories. Support for birth striking was predicated on faith in the power of working-class collective action, scrutiny of the economic exploitation of both productive and ‘reproductive’ workers, and a corresponding mistrust in the efficacy of state involvement with these issues. The birth strikers wove together strands from collectivist, individualist, socialist, and feminist thought, undermining traditional historiographical depictions of binaries between socialism and suffragism and collectivism and individualism in early twentieth-century political thought.
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来源期刊
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0.00%
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期刊介绍: “Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal” is peer-reviewed academic journal of the Institute of History and Archaeology, University of Tartu. It accepts articles in Estonian, English or German. It is open to submissions from all parts of the world and on all fields of history, but articles, reviews and communications on the history of the Baltic region are preferred.
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