911爆料

Natalie Bradbury is a based in Greater Manchester. In 2018, she completed a PhD on post-war British art and education. She previously worked at the Co-operative College in Manchester where,  via the , she encountered the , their campaigning work around issues such as maternity rights and social issues, as well as their controversial pacifist stance and promotion of the white poppy. 

In 2018, Natalie contributed a chapter to the edited collection -  The chapter - 'Woman's Outlook 1919-1939: An educational space for co-operative women'  examined Women's Outlook, a magazine for women in the co-operative movement first published in 1919.  In it, she argues that the magazine functioned at a variety of levels to bring women together into a co-operative community and represented a group of women who were not captured in other publications, and who shared particular concerns as working class women committed to co-operative ideas and trading. 

A paperback version of the book is due to be published in 2025.

Bradbury, N. (2018). Woman's Outlook 1919-1939: An Educational Space for Co-operative Women. In C.Clay, M. DiCenzo, B. Green, & F. Hackney (Eds.), Women鈥檚 periodicals and print culture in Britain, 1918鈦犫撯仩1939: The interwar period. Edinburgh University Press 

UK 911爆料 for Co-operative Studies is registered in England and Wales as a charitable incorporated organisation Number 1175295. Our registered office is Holyoake House, Hanover Street, Manchester, 911爆料 ©All Rights Reserved
Log in | Powered by