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Ladies Can’t Climb Ladders: The Pioneering Adventures of the First Professional Women

von Jane Robinson

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It is a myth that the First World War liberated women. The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act of 1919 was one of the most significant pieces of legislation in modern Britain. It should have marked a social revolution, opening the doors of the traditional professions to women who had worked so hard during the War, and welcoming them inside as equals. But what really happened? Ladies Can't Climb Ladders focuses on the lives of pioneering women forging careers in the fields of medicine, law, academia, architecture, engineering and the church. In her startling study into the public and private worlds of these unsung heroines, Jane Robinson sheds light on their desires and ambitions, and how family and society responded to this emerging class of working women. This book is written in their honour. Their shared vision, sacrifice and spirited perseverance began a process we have yet to finish. Their experiences raise live questions about equal opportunity, the gender pay gap, the work/life balance - and whether it is possible for women to have it all. _______________________________ 'A wonderful celebration of female pioneers' Sunday Times 'A crackingly good read' Telegraph 'A stirring testament to unsung heroes' Observer 'A lesson in how unthinkingly we wear our freedom' The Times… (mehr)
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An entertaining survey of the trials and triumphs of women entering the professions in the UK from the Victorian era onwards, concentrating on the years up to WW2. It's quite chatty and in some cases light-hearted, but with a serious point to make that some of the prejudice and discrimination of the early years has still not left us. Recommended. ( )
  SChant | Nov 5, 2020 |
From a recommendation on Instagram, I found this potted history of the first 'professional' career women to be interesting, inspiring, infuriating - bloody men! - and sorry but also slightly boring. I was expecting each 'pioneer' to be given their own chapter, like mini biographies, so that I could get to know them but the focus is on the historical prospects of women doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, and the layout is therefore rather choppy. The same women appear in each chapter, yet with the focus on wartime opportunities and post-war prejudices, balancing work and home life, how the public viewed working women, the marriage bar and even leisure time. Although I appreciate all of the well-researched stats and sources, I'm just more of a people person!

My main gripe with the subject is that the crux of the uphill battle faced by the first women professionals can be summed up in one word: men. They made the rules to benefit themselves and then actually quoted such stupid arguments like lack of precedence and protecting the livelihood of the 'breadwinner' (like women can't work to support a family) back at the intelligent and determined women who dared to challenge the status quo. 'Power was a man's birthright. Who were women - untutored, temperamentally unfit, inexperienced and over-emotional - to trespass now?' Of course women are only good for marriage and motherhood, and naturally they can't have families AND careers. ARGH!

That annoyance aside, I have nothing but admiration for the women throughout history who, for whatever reason, thought, 'Why can't I?' and promptly did. Men tried to keep them in their place - the home - by enforcing or misinterpreting archaic laws, pricing women out of education and generally belittling their female counterparts, but the Sexual Discrimination (Removal) Act in 1919 and the eventual removal of the marriage bar were on the side of the professional working woman. Not that we've quite reached a level of 'natural justice' even now.

A fitting tribute told in a personal, approachable narrative, but the author's scattergun approach is a bit repetitive at times. ( )
  AdonisGuilfoyle | Nov 4, 2020 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Jane RobinsonHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Cass, KarenErzählerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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It is a myth that the First World War liberated women. The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act of 1919 was one of the most significant pieces of legislation in modern Britain. It should have marked a social revolution, opening the doors of the traditional professions to women who had worked so hard during the War, and welcoming them inside as equals. But what really happened? Ladies Can't Climb Ladders focuses on the lives of pioneering women forging careers in the fields of medicine, law, academia, architecture, engineering and the church. In her startling study into the public and private worlds of these unsung heroines, Jane Robinson sheds light on their desires and ambitions, and how family and society responded to this emerging class of working women. This book is written in their honour. Their shared vision, sacrifice and spirited perseverance began a process we have yet to finish. Their experiences raise live questions about equal opportunity, the gender pay gap, the work/life balance - and whether it is possible for women to have it all. _______________________________ 'A wonderful celebration of female pioneers' Sunday Times 'A crackingly good read' Telegraph 'A stirring testament to unsung heroes' Observer 'A lesson in how unthinkingly we wear our freedom' The Times

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