Women and the Miners' Strike, 1984-1985
Natalie Thomlinson author Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Publishing:31st Oct '25
£19.99
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Just days into the miners' strike of 1984-1985, a few women in coalfield communities around Britain began to meet to consider how they could support the dispute, a clash with the Thatcher government over the future of the coal industry. Women ultimately formed a national network of groups that some observers saw as an 'alternative welfare state', helping to keep the strike going for just under a year. This book is the first study of this national movement, illuminating its achievements, but also telling the less well-known story of arguments and divisions with men in the National Union of Mineworkers and feminists in the women's liberation movement. Many women in the strike support movement, despite their activism, resolutely denied that they were 'political' at all, defining themselves as 'ordinary' women, housewives, mothers, and workers; and, despite some claims that women activists had been transformed for ever by their experiences, most of those involved felt they had been changed only in more subtle ways. Women and the Miners' Strike is also the first book to look beyond the activists to study the experiences of the majority of women in mining families who did not get involved in activism. Some of these women supported the strike by going out to work themselves to keep their families going; others supported their menfolk with practical and emotional support in the home. A large number were ambivalent about the dispute. The experiences of women whose husbands or fathers worked through the strike, or returned to work early, have generally been almost entirely obscured within popular memory. This book therefore also demonstrates how some women whose husbands broke the strike refashioned concepts like democracy and community to justify their actions, and how some even formed their own support groups to aid other women in their communities who found themselves under fire for opposing the strike. Through examining the stories of women and their varied experiences during the strike, the book sheds new light on working-class women's relationship to the 'political' and the 'ordinary', and demonstrates the ways in which gender roles, working-class lifestyles, and coalfield communities changed in Britain during the postwar period.
Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, who with Natalie Thomlinson wrote Women and the Miners' Strike, 1984-1985, the first national examination of the role of women,using interviews with more than 100 of those involved, highlight how crucial miners' wives were to keeping the bitter struggle going for a year. * Simon Greaves, Financial Times *
This excellent new book... provides fresh ways of thinking about the relationships between social change and activism, as well as class and feminism. * Freya Marshall Payne, Times Literary Supplement *
Women and the Miners' Strike does not set out to shatter [the] "myth" of the Strike but rather to elucidate it's enduring power... [It is] brilliantly successful. * Professor Helen McCarthy, University of Cambridge, Women's History Review *
deeply researched and fascinating * Duncan Money, Urban History *
timely and important ... the high drama of a global and national industrial dispute contextualised and personalised * Tessa Chynoweth, Cultural and Social History *
ISBN: 9780198980766
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
304 pages