Lydia Becker's "School for Science": a challenge to domesticity

Womens Hist Rev. 2001;10(4):629-50. doi: 10.1080/09612020100200303.

Abstract

Lydia Becker (1827-1890) is known as a leader of the Women's Suffrage Movement but little is known about her work to include women and girls in science. Before her energy was channelled into politics, she aimed to have a scientific career. Mid-Victorian Britain was a period in which women's intellect and potential were widely debated, and in which the dominant ideology was that their primary role in life was that of wife and mother. Science was widely regarded as a "masculine" subject which women were deliberately discouraged from studying. The author concentrates on the two main areas in which important contributions were made, the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Manchester School Board.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Education* / economics
  • Education* / history
  • Faculty / history
  • Gender Identity
  • History, 19th Century
  • Public Policy
  • Science* / economics
  • Science* / education
  • Science* / history
  • Social Change* / history
  • Students* / history
  • Students* / psychology
  • United Kingdom / ethnology
  • Women's Health* / economics
  • Women's Health* / ethnology
  • Women's Health* / history
  • Women's Rights* / economics
  • Women's Rights* / education
  • Women's Rights* / history
  • Women* / education
  • Women* / history
  • Women* / psychology
  • Women, Working / education
  • Women, Working / history
  • Women, Working / psychology