Tabela de Conteúdo
Introduction – Lucy Bland and Richard Carr
1 Peace, but not at any price: British socialists’ calls for peace on the eve of World War One – Marcus Morris
2 At the crossroads: the Labour Party, the trade unions and the choices of direction for the democratic Left – Chris Wrigley
3 ‘One of the most revolutionary proposals that has ever been put before the House’: the passage of the Parliament (Qualification of Women) Act 1918 – Mari Takayanagi
4 Labour and socialism during the Great War in Bristol and Northampton – Matthew Kidd
5 A stronghold of liberalism? The north-east Lancashire cotton weaving districts and the First World War – Jack Southern
6 Living through war, waging peace: comparing Mary Macarthur and Sylvia Pankhurst – Deborah Thom
7 ‘Industrial unionism for women’: Ellen Wilkinson and the unionisation of shop workers, 1915–18 – Matt Perry
8 The unsung heroines of radical wartime activism: gender, militarism and collective action in the British Women’s Corps – Krisztina Robert
9 Charlie Chaplin’s war: a British radical in tumultuous times – Richard Carr
10 Irish Labour and the ‘Cooperative Commonwealth’ in the era of the Great War – Marc Mulholland
11 Russia’s war and revolutions as seen by Morgan Philips Price and Arthur Henderson – Jonathan Davis
12 The Stanford connection: David Starr Jordan, eugenics and the Anglo-American anti-war movement – Gavin Baird and Bradley W. Hart
13 The problem of war aims and the Treaty of Versailles – John Callaghan
Index