TWL.2003.215.b - A woman's work is never done
- UKLSE-DL1BP010020010017
- Folder
- 1974
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.215.b - A woman's work is never done
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.20a - Women's struggle won the vote, use it for disarmament
Personal author: Campbell, Thalia (designer)
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.209 - Bite the hand that feeds you
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.19a - Women for Life on Earth : Peace March Cardiff, Brawdy, 1982
Personal author: Forber, Liz (designer)
Corporate author: Women for Life on Earth (publisher)
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.197.a - Capitalism also depends on domestic labour
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.196 - My Wife Doesn't Work
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.195 - Heard this one before?
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.18b - Women for Life on Earth : Banners Exhibition
Personal author: Campbell, Thalia (designer)
Corporate author: Women for Life on Earth (publisher)
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.18a - Women for Life on Earth : Banners Exhibition
Personal author: Campbell, Thalia (designer)
Corporate author: Women for Life on Earth (publisher)
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.17 - Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.16a - International Women's Day for Disarmament
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TWL.2003.15 - Thousands of WOMEN will reclaim Greenham Common
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TWL.2003.14 - Women's Peace Camp
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.2003.13 - Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
Corporate author: Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND)
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TWL.2003.11 - International Women's blockade at Greenham Common
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Personal author: Leeson, Loraine (photographer)
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TWL.1999.62 - Justice for Women. Male violence against women
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.1999.238 - Women's Information and Referral Exchange (WIRE) : The Women's Resource Centre
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TWL.1999.237 - Justice for Women : Southall Black Sisters benefit
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.1999.158 - Women's Aid : Help against domestic violence
Corporate author: Women's Aid
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
TWL.1999.109 - Which one are you?
Corporate author: See Red Women's Workshop
Note: Check LSE Archives Catalogue for additional information about this poster.
'These Dangerous Women' Oral History Project
Part of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, British Section (WILPF)
The series contains the recordings of interviews of 8 members of WILPF and related documents. The interviews were conducted between 2013 and 2015, as part of a part of the 'These Dangerous Women' community heritage project to mark the centenary of the formation of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). Funded by the National Lottery Heritage and run by Clapham Film Unit and WILPF, the project's aims were to celebrate and commemorate the women who tried to stop World War I and founded the organisation. For more information, visit the WILPF UK website and watch the film produced as part of the project.
Personal author: Chapman, Rev. Hugh B.
Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in the Finding Aids field.
The Economic Aspect of Woman Suffrage by Ephredos
Personal author: Ephredos
Corporate author: Irishwomen's Reform League
Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in the Finding Aids field.
Tanya Myers interviewed by Alice Robinson
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Tanya.
Tanya is based in Nottingham and has been a theatre maker since her early twenties. At that age she also arrived at Greenham, already a politically minded person. She came to mostly spend her time at Green Gate in the forest, and at the 'London House' in Petherton Road, a sort of halfway house run by Greenham Women, with no heating or electricity. She spent time at Greenham as a pregnant woman and with an infant, and she speaks about what this meant to her. Tanya also speaks with great passion and detail about the creativity and spiritual experience of the actions, including the raising of the dragon, and keening. She focusses on her particular story, while reflecting on the wider consciousness of the group of women, and the shedding and sharing of values.
Tanya was interviewed by Alice Robinson in 2019.
Tamsin Clayton interviewed by Sarah Learmonth
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Tamsin answered a call for women to go to Greenham Peace Camp. She arrived in 1983 with her 2-year-old daughter and although she started at Blue Gate, she and others with children decided to re-establish Red Gate. Tamsin talks about how she went to Greenham to save herself, to discover her people and how amazing it felt to be able to be herself and discuss any issues without being judged. Tamsin's story is one of great personal discovery, a legacy that she has taken into the rest of her life: 'I went to Greenham and I wasn't mad anymore, I was normal'.
Tamsin was interviewed by Sarah Learmonth in 2019.
Suzanne Novak interviewed by Josephine Liptrott
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Suzanne has enjoyed a long and successful career in the NHS. She did not live full-time at the Greenham Common peace camp but was a regular visitor, occasionally staying overnight, in the early-mid 1980s. She first visited the camp for Embrace the Base and returned numerous times in the years that followed, often accompanied by one or both of her sisters. Suzanne's first daughter, Scarlett, was born in September 1984 at the South London Hospital at which Greenham women were frequent visitors to join the occupation protesting the hospital's closure. Suzanne felt that her role at Greenham Common was to provide morale and support to the women there by swelling their ranks when needed and demonstrating that their views were shared by others outside the camp. She was also part of a wider network connecting the women of Greenham to other actions and campaigns taking place around the country.
Suzanne was interviewed by Josephine Liptrott in 2019.