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  1. 23 de ago. de 2017 · This article explores the contribution made by Helen Taylor to the Victorian land reform movement, 1879–1890. It concentrates on her political agency after 1882 to evidence that the importance of Taylor was three-fold.

    • Janet Smith
    • 2017
  2. Signature. Helen Taylor (31 July 1831 – 29 January 1907) was an English feminist, writer and actress. She was the daughter of Harriet Taylor Mill and stepdaughter of John Stuart Mill. After the death of her mother she lived and worked with Mill, and together they promoted women's rights. From 1876 to 1884 (when she quit due to her health) she ...

    • 31 July 1831, Kent Terrace, London, England
    • Torquay Cemetery
    • Feminism
    • 29 January 1907 (aged 75), Torquay, England
  3. Helen Taylors work for land nationalisation in Great Britain and Ireland 1879–1907: women’s political agency in the British Victorian land movement. August 2017. Women s History Review...

  4. 18 de jul. de 2023 · This chapter will examine the nature of the feminism within those campaigns, using the work of Helen Taylor (1831–1907) to illustrate the changes, continuities, and diversity within the women’s rights movement throughout the Victorian period.

  5. 11 de oct. de 2018 · Helen Taylor was born in London on the 27th of July 1831, the only daughter and youngest child of John and Harriet Taylor. Helen had little formal education as a child, but travelled widely in Europe with her mother. Her father died when she was a teenager in 1849, and her mother remarried the philosopher and politician, John Stuart Mill, two ...

  6. of the antagonism. Her important contribution to Victorian social and political life has been largely ignored. The study will examine the significance of her work across a wide range of political and social organisations from 1876 onwards; namely the London School Board, the Irish question, land reform, the Social Democratic

  7. Helen Taylors work for land nationalisation in Great Britain and Ireland 1879–1907: women’s political agency in the British Victorian land movement.