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Class, ethnicity and gender intertwined : Jewish women and the East London Rent strikes, 1935-1940

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Article

Srebrnik, Henry

Women's History Review

1999

4

3

283-299

gender ; history ; political behaviour ; political ideology ; women ; womens rights ; working class

United Kingdom

Gender equality & Women

English

"Feminist theorists have long debated whether gender or class position is of primary importance in shaping women's political consciousness; the consequences of ethnic or religious distinctions have not been examined as fully. This article hopes to rectify some of these oversights by focusing on the experiences of working-class, east London Jewish women involved in the pre-war rent strikes organized by the Communist-led Stepney Tenants' Defence League. It attempts to explain why so many of them became left-wing militants while their female Irish neighbors, equally marginalized, often gravitated towards the radical right. It concludes that in these close-knit communities ethnic identity proved more politically salient than did class or gender."

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