‘Youth culture’ following World War II

After the Second World War, a new youth culture occurred in Britain. Youth culture is members of a group, like teenagers between the ages fourteen and twenty-five, who have a different style, behaviour, beliefs, clothes, music taste, vocabulary, including also expressing their identities. More specifically, youth culture is based on the different behaviours and values … Read more

The Suffragists

Many years passed without significant change until the Reform Act of 1832 when Henry Hunt proposed a political franchise that recognised equality for men and women which gave them the opportunity to vote. He was defeated, however middle class men were granted access into the parliamentary system. (Simkin, 2015) Chartism was the response to the … Read more

Women’s rights in Canada

The rights that women enjoy in Canada today are connected to the efforts and contributions of the suffragette movement dating back to the early 1900’s. The role of women in society has evolved tremendously over the years and this can be directly associated with the duties they performed during World War I and II, the … Read more

Why did the Great War begin?

The Great War began on the 28th of July, 1914, and ended on the 11th of November, 1918, lasting 4 years, 3 months, and 2 weeks. It was considered to be ‘the war to end all wars’, and caused mass devastation and destruction. Millions upon millions of soldiers died, and millions more were injured or … Read more

The French Revolution – a great time of change and reform in history

The French Revolution that began in the 18th century in France changed the view on the true power of the people while shattering the political system that has been Europe’s history. The French Revolution began for many different reasons; new Enlightenment ideas, influence of the American Revolution, the problems with social divisions and taxes, financial … Read more

The 1910s – the decade of struggle

America today is one of the most powerful figures in the world, but most people do not know how or when it rose to power. It occurred in the 1990s when America became the richest nation in the world. World War 1 showed the world what America was capable of, as well as causing many … Read more

President Wilson – women’s right to vote

In his office in the White House, President Wilson was debating against himself. It was 1917 and there was a group of picketers outside demanding that he support women’s right to vote. All this time he had opposed just that. Now it came down to this moment. Either join his daughter and the mob, or … Read more

Women, slaves and immigrants – three groups that faced marginalization

There were primarily three groups whose emotions, purposes, and objectives were not addressed at all, and they were women, slaves, and immigrants. They all faced a great amount of marginalization by the government, other groups, and white men. Women were not considered important in any way during the Reconstruction period. They were not allowed to … Read more

Rights of women in the 1900s

The 1900s bared many changes in the rights of women, characterized by movements that caused political and societal reform. The suffragette and abolition movements, reform in pre-civil war america, and second wave feminism all contributed greatly to the rights of women in America . Women were tasked with writing their own history pertaining to their … Read more

The imperial system

An imperial system is one in which a country extends their power and influence over a certain group of people or places. Many world leaders sought to colonize and imperialize other countries in order to exert their dominance. European countries in particular did this to emphasize their stance as the cultural hegemon, forcing different peoples … Read more

What reasons are there for women getting the vote in 1918?

During the 19th century many laws were passed which made Britain more democratic by empowering men, but women were never given the right to vote in elections. Most men, including those in government, believed that women were uneducated, unexperienced, indecisive, juvenile and understood little about the world of politics, economics and business. In the eyes … Read more

Legislative change to the role of women

The legislative introduction of greater electoral equality for women, within the respective 1918 and 1928 Representation of the People Acts, characterises a developing respect for women alongside a burgeoning appreciation for their social role. Arguably, however, the ploys of several female suffrage movements, the introduction of a female workforce as consequence of the First World … Read more

Women’s suffrage

The beginning of Queen Victoria’s reign might appear to the lay man as an opportunity for the female sex to have a voice owing to the fact that she was the first queen regnant in a hundred and twenty-three years of monarchy in Great Britain. Never the less this voice applied solely to the queen … Read more

The four waves of feminism

“Okoloma looked at me and said, ‘You know, you’re a feminist.’ It was not a compliment. I could tell from his tone – the same tone with which a person would say, ‘You’re a supporter of terrorism,” said Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in her Ted Talk and then later, essay, We should all be Feminists (Adichie, … Read more