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Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 [Review] Mary Lee : The Life and Times of a 'turbulent Anarchist' and Her Battle for Women's Rights
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'As a female who similarly migrated from Armagh to Adelaide, and who came to be interested in women’s suffrage—researching and writing about it rather than having to actively campaign for it, thankfully—I have always been intrigued by the figure and life of Mary Lee. With this book, Denise George uses her considerable skills to flesh out the life of this little-known activist. What results is a beautifully written, interconnecting biography of Mary Lee with a history of South Australia and its woman suffrage movement.' (Introduction)

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    y separately published work icon Lilith no. 25 November 2019 17381350 2019 periodical issue ‘GET OUT OF MY UTERUS’ and ‘Women’s rights are human rights’ are slogans you might expect to see in an exhibition on the Women’s Liberation Movement. Yet in 2019, a year that has seen the sustained activism of women worldwide for recognition of female health concerns, women’s safety and bodily autonomy in the eyes of the State, these slogans are more relevant than ever. Australian women watched as the American state of Alabama passed the most restrictive abortion ban in the United States, containing no exceptions for rape or incest. Closer to home, anti-abortion groups recently rallied against a bill proposing to decriminalise abortion in New South Wales. Violence against women remains a national crisis. For Australian women between 15 and 44 years of age, intimate partner violence is the leading cause of death, disability and illness. It is even worse for Indigenous women, who are thirty-seven times more likely to be hospitalised than non-Indigenous women. On average one woman per week is killed by an intimate partner. (Editorial introduction) 2019 pg. 109-110
Last amended 16 Sep 2019 13:20:25
109-110 [Review] Mary Lee : The Life and Times of a 'turbulent Anarchist' and Her Battle for Women's Rightssmall AustLit logo Lilith
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