
Contents
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18 Y Gymraes (The Welshwoman): Ambivalent Domesticity in Women’s Welsh-language Interwar Print Media
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Time and Tide and Women’s Work Time and Tide and Women’s Work
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The Essay Series: A Format for Debate The Essay Series: A Format for Debate
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The Essay Series as Provocation: ‘Women of the Leisured Classes’ The Essay Series as Provocation: ‘Women of the Leisured Classes’
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The Essay Series Goes Live: Public debate, BBC Broadcast, and a Boxing Match The Essay Series Goes Live: Public debate, BBC Broadcast, and a Boxing Match
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Diversifying the Essay Series Format: ‘Appendages’, Economists, and Feminists Diversifying the Essay Series Format: ‘Appendages’, Economists, and Feminists
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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21 The Essay Series and Feminist Debate: Controversy and Conversation about Women and Work In Time and Tide
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Published:January 2018
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Abstract
This chapter considers the ways in which the feminist periodical, Time and Tide, founded by Lady Margaret Rhondda along with the Six Point Group, used the adaptable journalistic device of the essay series to engage its readers in current and pressing debates about women. In the uncertainties and upheavals of postwar Britain, roles for women were unclear and undetermined, and the capacious form of the essay series, combined with skilful editorship, facilitated a range of experts and varied voices to discuss sometimes contentious issues of women's leisure, education, motherhood and working lives. Time and Tide made full use of the journal's periodicity to ensure that it became a forum for debate about women's domestic and professional occupations, and determinedly engaged its readers by printing extensive reader and expert correspondence and then providing editorial responses to those letters and interventions. There was even a staged public meeting, broadcast on BBC radio.
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