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  1. Elizabeth („Bessie“) Rayner Parkes, verheiratete Belloc (* 16. Juni 1829 in Birmingham, Warwickshire; † 23. März 1925 in Slindon, West Sussex ), war eine der prominentesten britischen Feministinnen und Frauenrechtlerinnen im Viktorianischen Zeitalter sowie eine Dichterin, Essayistin und Journalistin. [ 1] Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Werke.

  2. Elizabeth Rayner Belloc (née Parkes; 16 June 1829 – 23 March 1925) [2] was one of the most prominent English feminists and campaigners for women's rights in Victorian times and also a poet, essayist and journalist.

  3. 6. Sept. 2019 · Bessie Rayner Parkes (later Belloc) lived an unorthodox life as a working feminist journalist, editor, and social activist whose abiding concern was the condition of women’s everyday lives.

    • Janice Schroeder
    • Janice.schroeder@carleton.ca
  4. 21. März 2018 · Bessie Rayner Parkes played an influential role in the progress of the law by advocating for women’s rights through social and legal change. Parkes was born in Birmingham into a middle-class family. Her father was a politician and lawyer. Political engagement was widespread amongst wealthy women with the socio-economic means to ...

  5. Bessie Rayner Parkes (later Belloc), a late nineteenth-century feminist, focused her writings especially on issues relating to women's work. During her life she published a collection of miscellaneous essays, a collection of vignettes, numerous articles in periodicals, a travel book, and political treatises.

  6. Bessie Rayner Parkes (later Belloc, 1829–1925) was a central figure in British women’s rights activism during the 1850s and 1860s. She was founding editor of the feminist English Woman’s Journal and one of the organisers of the pioneering 1866 petition for women’s suffrage.

  7. 2. Dez. 2020 · Investigating the “economical question” (p. 40), in nineteenth-century Britain, Bessie Rayner Parkes, in Essays on Woman’s Work describes a “laisser aller” political and social system focused on England’s general economy at the expense of those “unfitted for the race” (p. 38).