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VIDA : a woman for our time / Jacqueline Kent.

By: Publisher: [North Sydney, New South Wales] : Penguin Random House Australia, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Description: xv, 384 pages, 8 pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0670079499
  • 9780670079490
Other title:
  • Vida : a woman for our time
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 324.623 23
Contents:
Part 1: Young Vida -- Part 2: Apprentice -- Part 3: Candidate -- Part 4: Activist.
Summary: Blazing her trail at the dawn of the 20th century, Vida Goldstein remains Australia's most celebrated crusader for the rights of women. Her life, as a campaigner for the suffrage in Australia, Britain and America, an advocate for peace, a fighter for social equality and a shrewd political commentator, marks her as one of Australia's foremost women of courage and principle. Vida first came to national prominence as the first woman in the Western world to stand for a national Parliament, in Victoria, for the Senate, in 1903. As a fighter for equal rights for women and as a champion of social justice, she quickly established a pattern of working quietly against men's control of Australian society. Her work for the peace movement and against conscription during the heightened emotions of WW1 showed her determination to defy governments in the name of fairness and equity. Vida came to adulthood when Australia was in the process of inventing itself as a new nation, one in which women might have opportunities equal to those of men. Her work for her own sex, especially her battles for equality in politics, illuminated issues that persist to this day.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Jessie Street National Women's Library Processing Centre Available for reference in the library and ILL 90806

Includes bibliographical references (pages 285-299) and index.

Part 1: Young Vida -- Part 2: Apprentice -- Part 3: Candidate -- Part 4: Activist.

Blazing her trail at the dawn of the 20th century, Vida Goldstein remains Australia's most celebrated crusader for the rights of women. Her life, as a campaigner for the suffrage in Australia, Britain and America, an advocate for peace, a fighter for social equality and a shrewd political commentator, marks her as one of Australia's foremost women of courage and principle. Vida first came to national prominence as the first woman in the Western world to stand for a national Parliament, in Victoria, for the Senate, in 1903. As a fighter for equal rights for women and as a champion of social justice, she quickly established a pattern of working quietly against men's control of Australian society. Her work for the peace movement and against conscription during the heightened emotions of WW1 showed her determination to defy governments in the name of fairness and equity. Vida came to adulthood when Australia was in the process of inventing itself as a new nation, one in which women might have opportunities equal to those of men. Her work for her own sex, especially her battles for equality in politics, illuminated issues that persist to this day.

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