J. Vellacott-newberry, Anti-war suffragists, pp.411-436, 1977.

M. G. See and . Fawcett, What I Remember (London, 1924) and R. Strachey, The Cause: A Short History of the Women's Movement in Great Britain, 1978.

, The Blood of Our Sons': Men, Women, and the Renegotiation of British Citizenship During the Great War, The most important of these is N. Gullace, 2002.

J. Vellacott, Feminist consciousness and the First World War', in Women and Peace: Theoretical, Historical and Practical Perspectives, p.121, 1987.

. Vellacott, Feminist consciousness and the First World War, p.116

S. Kent, Making Peace: the Reconstruction of Gender in Interwar Britain, 1993.

, See, for instance, the correspondence page of The Common Cause, p.460, 1914.

. See, C. Instance, and . Pankhurst, There is a minor factual error on p. 21 where Vellacott claims that The Suffragette reappeared in April 1915 under the new name Britannia. It did indeed reappear in April 1915 but adopted its new name only six months later, The Suffragette, p.118, 1915.

, For the sophisticated version of this point, see Meaning and Context: Quentin Skinner and his Critics, 1988.

F. Militarism-versus, , p.20, 1987.

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