At the Intimacy of the Home: Children’s Views of Private Life in Postrevolutionary Mexico

By Daniela Lechuga Herrero The Mexican revolution was a conflict that was experienced in different ways and with different intensities throughout the country. The postr-evolutionary governments, such as the one of Álvaro Obregón, Plutarco Elías Calles and Lázaro Cárdenas, strengthened their policies to recover the country’s stability. In addition to the improvements in education and […]

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“A Penny From You” – Activism and Organisation in Edinburgh During the Spanish Civil War

By Harry Taylor The outbreak of Civil War in Spain in the summer of 1936 caused reactions across the globe. Whilst the leading powers in the world opted for a policy of containment designed to prevent another international conflict, countless men and women organised in support of the threatened Republican government. Most famously, this took […]

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Food for thought: how Walter Millsap offered Toshiko Imamura intellectual nourishment during the deprivations of internment

By Henry Jacob It is always hard to miss the chance to offer a farewell in person. Leftist organizer Walter Millsap faced this scenario on May 12, 1942. That night, Millsap arrived at the home of his best friend Keikichi Imamura in Pasadena, California. Even after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Millsap remained close to […]

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Women of the West End: the “Queen of the Night Clubs,” her Kingdom, and the Perceptions of Dance Hostesses in 1920s London

By Catherine Stainer In 1920s London, women were at the centre of the city’s nightlife. Kate Meyrick (1875-1933), dubbed the “Queen of the Nightclubs” by the press, was a pioneering businesswoman whose career as a nightclub proprietor spanned the length of the decade, despite five stints in prison for contravention of licensing laws.[1] In early […]

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