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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/13519/archive/files/15d137a9e43b06c01ed41f5dc5ed1789.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=rmAn5QNloUUta9MU39IhlHL-TRhxZnrPztFIuZpDRMAP7b4POp7vpparT6AHgxtcL-LJwcH8%7E3YKarHRu1%7EzVa6baSHDBjizHWOWzuVoEWa0nKabO11AZ0aklZcQV5ctK79nWabt%7ER-9dAIE4oWpnczzKJ4wW0INn2T9iV8iEWzk7KMnLpgL4qpFp9kdI9s2LDs-eEX9k8jqHuZcLM2sDyJdeZB1Eau6moSSMe0vvVU%7E0xlBs%7ESuZkMH57fjnYUoeK54KZwkLNJwmtvNIOwGYmNIHCTT7dZpVGKumYJyg%7EPIV9arxFWKryGXEquwNVcTRsLESZfnqmJvCJl63Gnefg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Time and Tide
Description
An account of the resource
Margaret Haig, Lady Rhondda, started this female-directed weekly review of politics and the arts, modelled along the lines of the <em>New Statesman</em>. Starting out as an overtly feminist magazine and written largely by and for women, it also worked from the beginning to extend its reach beyond a feminist and female readership and by the mid-1930s had secured a unique position as the only female-run general-audience weekly review of its day.<br /><br />For a period it carried reports of the Six Point Group, a new feminist organisation founded by Lady Rhondda. Regular contributors included Vera Brittain, Crystal Eastman, Cecily Hamilton, Winifred Holtby, Naomi Mitchison, Gwendolen Raverat, Elizabeth Robins, Christopher St. John, Helena Swanwick, Rebecca West, Virginia Woolf, and many others. In the 1920s its general standpoint was liberal feminist, with a marked interationalist-pacifist tendency; however, in the 1930s the feminism gradually faded away till it was restricted mainly to Lady Rhonda’s own “Notes on the Way."<br /><br />For indexes and articles on <em>Time and Tide</em>, see the <a href="http://interwarfeminism.omeka.net/exhibits/show/timeandtide">exhibit</a>.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1920-1979
Language
A language of the resource
English
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Weekly, then monthly
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Vera Laughton (1920), Helen Archdale (1920-1926), Lady Margaret Rhondda (1926-1958)
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Time and Tide 1.28 (19 November 1920)
Description
An account of the resource
<p>This issue significantly includes "A Programme" that outlines the six items around which Lady Rhondda would establish the Six Point Group in 1921: </p>
<ol><li>pensions for widowed mothers</li>
<li>the protection of unmarried mothers and their children</li>
<li>harsher laws for assaults against children</li>
<li>equal rights of guardianship for married parents</li>
<li>equal pay for women teachers</li>
<li class="last">equal opportunities for men and women in the Civil Service</li>
</ol><span>Lady Rhondda divides these points into two categories: those which particularly affect women as mothers, and those that regard the problem of achieving "equal pay for equal work" and "the equality of status for men and women."<br /><br />Also of note are the many literary articles in this issue, which include Margaret Wynn Nevinson's discussion of "Some of Our Younger Poets, a series of book reviews by Mary Agnes Hamilton and Rose Macaulay, and a page of short fiction and poetry. </span>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
19 November 1920
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Margaret Wynne Nevinson
Mary Agnes Hamilton
Rose Macaulay
M. E. Roach
F. M. Bradford
E. E. Helme
Christopher St. John
M. Philip E. Harrison
1920
fiction
Mary Agnes Hamilton
poetry
reviews
Rose Macaulay
Six Point Group