『The Suffragette Movement』のカバーアート

The Suffragette Movement

The Suffragette Movement

著者: Podra Network
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The long fight for the vote — the women who changed American democracy forever.Copyright Podra Network 世界
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  • Behind Bars: Prison, Force-Feeding, and Martyrdom in the Suffragette Movement
    2026/06/07
    In this compelling episode of The Suffragette Movement, host James Hartley explores the harrowing prison experiences that became a turning point in the fight for women's voting rights. Discover how suffragettes transformed British jails into battlegrounds for democracy through hunger strikes and civil disobedience.

    Learn about the government's brutal response of force-feeding, a practice that shocked the medical community and public conscience. We examine firsthand accounts from suffragettes like Marion Wallace Dunlop and Sylvia Pankhurst, whose testimonies exposed the reality of state violence against peaceful protesters.

    The episode analyzes the controversial Cat and Mouse Act of 1913, which created a cycle of imprisonment, release, and re-arrest that tormented activists while attempting to avoid creating martyrs. We explore how these prison experiences shifted public opinion and gave suffragettes the moral authority that speeches alone couldn't provide.

    From the first hunger strike in 1909 to Emily Wilding Davison's transformation into a suffragette martyr, this episode reveals how personal sacrifice became political power. Discover the international embarrassment these practices caused Britain and how prison experiences ultimately strengthened rather than weakened the suffrage movement.

    Essential listening for understanding how civil disobedience, state oppression, and moral courage intersected in one of history's most significant democratic movements.
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    7 分
  • Silent Sentinels: The Women Who Picketed the White House
    2026/05/31
    Explore the dramatic story of the Silent Sentinels, the brave women who became the first group to picket the White House in American history. From January 1917 to 1919, members of Alice Paul's National Woman's Party stood at the White House gates with banners demanding voting rights for women. This episode examines their controversial tactics, the public backlash they faced during World War I, and the brutal treatment they endured in prison, including the infamous 'Night of Terror' at Occoquan Workhouse. Discover how their persistent protests, hunger strikes, and willingness to be arrested helped shift public opinion and ultimately convinced President Wilson to support the 19th Amendment. Learn about the strategic brilliance behind their silent protests and how their militant approach complemented the more traditional lobbying efforts of other suffrage organizations. This compelling chapter in women's suffrage history demonstrates the power of civil disobedience and the sacrifices made by ordinary women who demanded their democratic rights. The Silent Sentinels' legacy continues to inspire modern social justice movements and reminds us that meaningful change often requires courage, persistence, and strategic nonviolent resistance.
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    6 分
  • Alice Paul: The Radical Who Changed Everything
    2026/05/24
    In this compelling episode of The Suffragette Movement, host James Hartley explores the revolutionary life of Alice Paul, the radical activist who transformed the American women's suffrage movement. Born to a Quaker family in 1885, Paul's journey from polite society to militant activism began during her studies in England, where she joined Emmeline Pankhurst's confrontational suffragette campaign. Returning to America in 1910, Paul brought unprecedented tactics to the suffrage movement, founding the National Woman's Party in 1913 and organizing the first-ever White House picketing campaign. The episode examines Paul's strategic brilliance in creating the Silent Sentinels, her controversial wartime protests that labeled President Wilson as 'Kaiser Wilson,' and her willingness to endure imprisonment and force-feeding for the cause. Hartley details how Paul's militant approach differed dramatically from existing suffrage organizations, focusing on holding the party in power directly accountable rather than pursuing gradual state-by-state change. The podcast explores Paul's role in securing passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920 and her subsequent creation of the Equal Rights Amendment in 1923. This episode provides essential insight into how confrontational activism and strategic media pressure transformed American women's rights, examining both Paul's remarkable achievements and the complex legacy of her methods in the broader context of social justice movements.
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    6 分
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