Accessibility statement

Kirsty Ryder

Purple White and Green: The Material Construction of Women's Suffrage 1832-1928

Supervisors: Dr Jonathan FinchDr Colleen Morgan

The careful construction of identities, and radical dissemination of merchandise during the women’s suffrage movement of the late 19th and early 20th century was innovative, drawing on contemporary consumerism to create a recognisable brand that brought cohesion to the movement and spread awareness of the campaign message.

With an integrated text and material based analysis of the wider range of material culture used by 'Votes For Women' and other campaigns, this PhD will examine the active role of objects in the women's suffrage movement, offering new insight into the creative resistance of activists who used objects to convey their message, and the collective identities that were formed and articulated through material culture. My research will contribute to an emerging area of archaeology concerned with radicalism; this has long been under-explored because of the ephemerality of sources associated with radical movements. Research into the radical use of objects by women will highlight how material culture enabled the disenfranchised to become politically involved, while bringing a new dimension to research on women's political history by addressing: 1) How objects helped to support suffrage campaigns and construct collective identities; 2) The types of material culture appropriated by suffrage campaigners, and how this reflected their social status/roles.

 

Contact details

Kirsty Ryder
Department of Archaeology
University of York
The King's Manor
York
YO1 7EP

Tel: (44) 1904 433931
Fax: (44) 1904 433902