Documentaries: Suffragette City
However, when I found a few minutes to dip into Suffragette City - their pun not mine - I discovered that I actually only needed around ninety seconds as, teasingly, they'd just sent me the trailer. So, I figure, might as well share it with you in full.
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As you can see, there are clearly plenty of objects that mark the violence of the struggle, such as hammers and force-feeding tubes, and I'm sure there will be too.
I'd never really thought about idea that this is the only political movement in British history to acheived its aims through violence. Is that true? I seem to remember that the Civil War wasn't exactly bloodless but I guess that is excluded from Roy Hattersley's category of Great Britain. (Act of Union in seventeen-o-something-or other, right?)Ìý But nothing since then while France, the United States, Russia and much of Europe had various types of revolutions?Ìý
Yet the suffragette item that I've always wanted is some distance from hammers and marching banners. It's the . Ever since I heard about it, I've loved the image of stuffy, buttoned-up husbands spluttering into their tea as they realise what their wife has served it up in. I like to think of it as embodying a secret groundswell of revolution in parlours around the country that supported all those marches and chanting.
Sadly, as a service sold a few years ago at auction for around £6,000, I think I'll still be drinking out of my range of mismatched, charity shop mugs for a while yet.
- Suffragette City will be show on ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ One in London at 7:30pm on Monday but you will be able to watch it, and all the other 12 local documentaries, for seven days afterwards on the iPlayer. (I'll post links to them here on Monday.)
- The documentary was made with the help of the Museum of London, which has also added some of their objects on this site.
** UPDATE - You can now watch all the documentaries on iPlayer until Mon 24 May. **
Comment number 1.
At 17th May 2010, jasonmarkwebber wrote:Many more objects from the Museum of London can be found online at the Exploring 20th Century London site:
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Comment number 2.
At 10th Aug 2010, Phil wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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