
Lady Insurrectionists
Women, Reform and Revolution in Victorian Britain
Judy Cox(Author)
Verso Books (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 3. November 2026
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-1-83674-190-9 (ISBN)
Description
Lady Insurrectionists tells the story of the iconoclastic women who helped ignite Chartism, the largest democratic movement of the nineteenth century. In this ground-breaking history, Judy Cox brings to life the radical voices of women who refused to be sidelined - figures like the 'Red-Hot Radical' poet Eliza Cook, Quaker abolitionist Elizabeth Pease and the electrifying Chartist speaker Mary Ann Walker. Far from being passive auxiliaries, these women were insurrectionists in thought and action - speaking from platforms, organising strikes, boycotts and petitions, and demanding political rights as workers, women and democrats. At a time when the vote was restricted to a privileged few, they demanded more - and did so on their own terms.
This is a bold and necessary rewriting of British radical history. Cox dismantles the myth that feminism began with middle-class suffragists, revealing how working-class women forged a radical politics that defied the gender and social conventions of their age. Lady Insurrectionists restores these women to their rightful place at the heart of the fight for mass democracy and the People's Charter - and shows how their legacy continues to shape struggles for justice today.
This is a bold and necessary rewriting of British radical history. Cox dismantles the myth that feminism began with middle-class suffragists, revealing how working-class women forged a radical politics that defied the gender and social conventions of their age. Lady Insurrectionists restores these women to their rightful place at the heart of the fight for mass democracy and the People's Charter - and shows how their legacy continues to shape struggles for justice today.
Reviews / Votes
This is a story of women fighting at barricades, of women theorizing capitalism, of women robbing trains and women smuggling weapons to fight the Tsar. They are the true foremothers of Feminism for the 99% -- Tithi Bhattacharya, co-author Feminism for the 99%More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 153 mm
Weight
567 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83674-190-9 (9781836741909)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Judy Cox is the author, most recently, of Rebellious Daughters of History, a group biography that grew out of daily Facebook posts during lockdown. Her other books are William Blake: The Scourge of Tyrants and The Women's Revolution: Russia 1905-1917. She has a History PhD from the University of Leeds and lives in west Yorkshire.
Content
Preface
Chapter One, The ‘Hen Chartists’ take Flight
‘The Apostle of Progress’ Frances Wright
Chapter Two, Radical Foremothers
‘White Slavery’ and the Radical Poetics of Mary Hutton
Chapter Three, Insurrection, 1839: ‘The Time of War’
‘Bid the outraged world, be free!’: Making Common Cause with Elizabeth Pease and Anne Knight
Chapter Four, General Strike, 1842: ‘Every woman ought to be a politician’
The ‘Red-Hot Radical’ Eliza Cook
Chapter Five, Revolution, 1848: ‘Breaking the chains of women’
Irish Nationalism, Chartism and the ‘Lady Insurrectionist’ Sarah Theobald
Chapter Six, Resistance, 1850s: ‘The strong-minded women of the party’
Chartism and Communism in the life of Helen Macfarlane
Chapter Seven, Suffrage, 1866: ‘Dangerous, go-ahead, revolutionary women’
The Many Faces of Eliza Lynn Linton
Chapter Eight, Chartist Afterlives: ‘Thanks to my mother’
The Political Journeys of Sarah Parker Remond
Further Reading
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index
Chapter One, The ‘Hen Chartists’ take Flight
‘The Apostle of Progress’ Frances Wright
Chapter Two, Radical Foremothers
‘White Slavery’ and the Radical Poetics of Mary Hutton
Chapter Three, Insurrection, 1839: ‘The Time of War’
‘Bid the outraged world, be free!’: Making Common Cause with Elizabeth Pease and Anne Knight
Chapter Four, General Strike, 1842: ‘Every woman ought to be a politician’
The ‘Red-Hot Radical’ Eliza Cook
Chapter Five, Revolution, 1848: ‘Breaking the chains of women’
Irish Nationalism, Chartism and the ‘Lady Insurrectionist’ Sarah Theobald
Chapter Six, Resistance, 1850s: ‘The strong-minded women of the party’
Chartism and Communism in the life of Helen Macfarlane
Chapter Seven, Suffrage, 1866: ‘Dangerous, go-ahead, revolutionary women’
The Many Faces of Eliza Lynn Linton
Chapter Eight, Chartist Afterlives: ‘Thanks to my mother’
The Political Journeys of Sarah Parker Remond
Further Reading
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index