OLH: Nancy Astor and Gendered Political Culture in Interwar Britain

Open Library of Humanities

This special collection is eclectic in its contributors and contributions; articles address a range of approaches to Astor and her period, offering new perspectives on Astor and beyond, including engagement with Astor as an individual, as well as consideration of issues of gender identity, difference, and representation. They provide a new voice and a new legacy. The Special Collection is edited by Dr Daniel Grey (Hertfordshire) and Dr Jacqui Turner (Reading). Grey is Head of History at Hertfordshire and has published extensively on women, crime and the state. Turner is Associate Professor of Modern British Political History and curator of the national Astor100 centenary programme. (Cover image Courtesy of The Box Plymouth in association with Astor100). 2019 marked the centenary of Nancy Astor’s election to the British Parliament, becoming the first woman to take her seat and thus changing the face of democracy forever. Astor was an ‘unconventional MP,’ and this collection considers the parliamentary politics and the gendered culture of the early 20th Century in which she operated. It engages with ways in which history has influenced the present, conceptualising a ‘future’ grounded in the gendered restrictions of the past. It considers how the identities of Astor and other women were constructed and deployed, and how her career has generated gendered discourses on government, citizenship and transformation.

You can find the open-access journal here.