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Full Description
Prisons and Prisoners is the autobiography of aristocratic suffragette Constance Lytton. In it, she details her militant actions in the struggle to gain the vote for women, including her masquerade and imprisonment as the working-class "Jane Warton." As a member of a well-known political family (and grand-daughter of the famous novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton), Lytton's arrests garnered much attention at the time, but she was treated differently than other suffragettes because of her class—when other suffragettes were forcibly fed while on hunger strikes, she was released. "Jane Warton," however, was forcibly fed, an act that permanently damaged Lytton's health, but that also became a singular moment in the history of women's and prisoner's rights.
This Broadview edition includes news articles, reviews, and illustrations on women's suffrage from the periodicals of the time.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Constance Lytton: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
Prisons and Prisoners: Some Personal Experiences
Appendix A: Glossary of Names
Appendix B: Other Suffragette Writing by Constance Lytton
"Woman Suffrage," The Times (14 July 1909)
From "The Prison Experiences of Lady Constance Lytton," Votes for Women (28 January 1910)
From "A Speech by Lady Constance Lytton. Delivered at the Queen's Hall, January 31, 1910," Votes for Women (4 February 1910)
Appendix C: Suffrage Material Concerning Lytton
From "The Outlook," Votes for Women (28 January 1910)
Emmeline Pethick Lawrence, "Lady Constance Lytton," Votes for Women (28 January 1910)
From "The 'Liverpool Courier' on 'Jane Warton's' Imprisonment"; "Some Press Comments," Votes for Women (4 February 1910)
From Victor Lytton, "The House of Lords and Women's Suffrage: Speech by The Earl of Lytton in the Debate in the House of Lords,—May 6th, 1914" (1914)
Appendix D: Reviews of Prisons and Prisoners
"'Prisons and Prisoners': Some Reviews of LadyConstance Lytton's Book," The Suffragette (27 March 1914)
From Christabel Pankhurst, "A Prisoner's Book," The Suffragette (13 and 20 March 1914)
"Views and Comments," The Egoist: An Individualist Review (15 May 1914)
Appendix E: Material Concerning Suffragettes and Prison
"Suffragist Women Prisoners," Home Office Papers and Memoranda 1889-1910 (1910)
From Kate Lilley, Prisoners and Prison Life (1912)
Appendix F: Photographs and Suffragette Cartoons and Sketches
Portrait of Constance Lytton (1914)
Portrait of Jane Warton (1914)
"Forcible Feeding in Prison" (28 January 1910)
"Suffragettes at Home" (14 April 1909)
"The Suffragette that Knew Jiu-Jitsu: The Arrest" (6 July 1910)
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