links to digital resources on gender & history

As more women’s & gender records are being digitised & more born-digital archives are being created from scratch, there are more opportunities than ever for us to encourage researchers & students to use these resources to expand our knowledge of women’s & gender history.

*I have gathered together digitised archives in the English language but for collections in other languages see, for example, Feminist & Women's Libraries & Archives Network.

This is an ongoing project of gathering together digital resources

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Keep an eye out for updates!

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This is an ongoing project of gathering together digital resources ~~ Keep an eye out for updates! ~~

gender resources - specialised

  • This archive offers a snapshot of feminist history in the 1960s and 1970s, the institutionalization of women’s centers and women’s studies as an academic discipline, and feminist struggles taking place at colleges and universities, in healthcare and social service centers, in political organizations and neighborhood meetings across the country.

  • A collection of documents and articles related to abortion and reproductive rights policy and campaigns in Ireland from a number of organisations in the archive.

    It is not intended to provide a complete historical outline of reproductive rights issues in Ireland, but to highlight the coverage of these issues in the archive. Materials are grouped chronologically below, and direct links provided to the relevant page in the document PDF.

    Explore the rest of the Irish Left Archive for other gender-related matters and sources!

  • Hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland ~ The Artists' Campaign to Repeal the Eighth Amendment was set up in 2015 by visual artists Cecily Brennan, Alice Maher, Eithne Jordan, and the poet Paula Meehan. It began as an online campaign appealing to fellow artists, writers, musicians, and actors to put their names to a statement calling for a repeal of the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland (Article 40.3.3). The aim of the campaign group was to promote national and international awareness of the restrictive reproductive laws of Ireland and to encourage and inspire other groups and activists to use cultural means to promote social change.

    The group went on to have a large presence at various demonstration marches including March for Choice (2016 & 2017), Strike for Repeal (2017), and International Women's Day (2018). Exhibitions and events included Day of Testimonies (2017) held at Project Arts Centre, Art and Action (2017) held at NCAD Gallery, EVA International Biennial (2018) held in Limerick, various Shred It events (2017-2018), 20 Seconds for Yes (2018) and Witness (2018).

    The Artists' Campaign to Repeal the Eighth Amendment played a leading role in the decisive referendum with "an unprecedented intervention in the public life of the State on the part of artists". This unique archive is documentary evidence of "a decisive moment in the interface between artists and public policy".

    Physical archive materials held at NIVAL may be consulted in the Reading Room by appointment only. Request an appointment by email nivalinfo@staff.ncad.ie

    4 series with 113 files containing over 2800 digital images, videos, audio files, and documents.

    Some materials have been redacted to exclude personal contact information only.

    Creators

    Artists' Campaign to Repeal the Eighth Amendment

    Brennan, Cecily

    Jordan, Eithne

    Maher, Alice

    Meehan, Paula

    Published Date

    2020

    Date

    2015-2018

    Subjects

    Reproductive rights

    Abortion

    Pro-choice movement

    Art

    Artists

    Art Activism

    Artist-led movements

    Protest movements

    National Campaigns

    Constitutional law--Ireland

    The Eighth Amendment

    Constitutional amendments

    Referendum

    Women's rights

    Personal narratives

    Social history

    Medical History

    Subjects (Places)

    Dublin

    Ireland

    Types

    Collection

    Rights

    The photographic material, press clippings, art works and design works are subject to copyright restrictions. For material published on the website please note the attached copyright statements. Please consult NIVAL staff re other material in the collection.

    Licence

    Please see individual objects for licensing information

    Depositing Organisation

    National Irish Visual Arts Library (NIVAL), NCAD

  • The Emma Goldman Papers, University of California, Berkeley, Library, collection of speeches, published essays and pamphlets, excerpts from her books, correspondence etc.

  • Links to some National Council of Women of Canada reports, hosted by The Online Books Page.

  • Atria ~ institute on gender equality and women's history

    Posters were always popular wherever women organised, held conferences and demonstrated, and were used to communicate their ideas and viewpoints. It was a cheap and effective way of bringing campaign issues to the general public’s attention. Atria’s collection contains more than 9,000 posters.

    All the posters can be viewed online and ordered in a digital format. When publishing, please be aware that copyright requirements may apply.

  • Complete, open access, everything from a single source – this is what the digital edition of Rosa Luxemburg's writings offers. Since the 1970s, Dietz Berlin has published the most comprehensive collection of Rosa Luxemburg's writings. The Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung is responsible for supervising the issue. In the future, the digital edition will expand the volumes available in book form, make it possible to discover Luxembourg for the first time, comprehensively and, above all, freely accessible.

  • Spare Rib Magazine, running from 1972-93, Spare Rib Magazine this now iconic magazine challenged the stereotyping and exploitation of women, while supporting collective, realistic solutions to the hurdles women faced. Also find on Internet Archive

  • The Suffrage Postcard Project is a digital humanities initiative that considers how illustrations and images of motherhood and fatherhood circulated transatlantically in early-twentieth-century postcards, both for and against women’s suffrage.

  • Take a journey through the personal, political and economic struggles that have symbolised women's battle for equality over the past 500 years, through a representative selection of the broad range of materials in LSE Library and The Women's Library @ LSE. A chronological presentation of more than 300 items from the 16th Century to the present day can be found in the timeline and in the additional items.

    Includes rare books, Emily Wilding Davison Centenary exhibition, photographs and postcards, pamphlets and magazines, and archives.

  • Website of a project on the history of A history of the Women’s Electoral Lobby (WEL) with some links to reports, presentations and some photographs.

    Material archives at the National Library of Australia.

    WEL is a feminist non-party-political lobby founded in Australia in 1972. WEL’s role as an advocate for women is recognised in the political and social history of Australia. WEL has been at the forefront of the struggle for equal employment opportunity, access to quality childcare, sex discrimination legislation, reproductive rights and women’s election to Parliament.

  • This collection contains manifestos, speeches, essays, and other materials documenting various aspects of the Women's Movement in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s.

    Women’s Liberation Movement Print Culture-Duke University

  • This is a selection of material from The Women’s Library collection. This collection grew out of the London Society for Women’s Suffrage which was founded in 1867. It started its formal life as a library in 1926 to preserve the history of suffrage but also to be a resource to women who were hoping to enter the professions.

    This collection contains suffrage newspapers, journals, pamphlets, leaflets and annual reports of different suffrage groups covering the women’s suffrage campaign from the late 19th century to 1928 when women were granted equal voting rights with men. You will be able to read about the campaign from the suffrage pamphlet collection of Ruth Cavendish Bentinck, suffragist and socialist, and from the suffrage newspapers of the late 19th century, such as Women’s Suffrage Journal and Shafts.

    This collection continues into the 1930s. Journals continued to be published: The Vote, Jus Suffragii, and the Common Cause became the Woman's Leader. There are also annual reports of the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship and the conference reports of the British Commonwealth League.

    This collection covers suffrage activity at home and abroad, but also highlights other feminist activism.

    LSE Library acknowledges the kind support of the Friends of the Women's Library in making the digitisation of this collection possible.

gender resources - general

  • The Australian Queer Archives (AQuA) collects, preserves and celebrates material from the lives and experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and gender diverse, intersex, queer, Brotherboy and Sistergirl (LGBTIQ+) Australians.

    Established in 1978, we hold the pre-eminent research collection for LGBTIQ+ histories in Australia.

  • Australian Women’s History Forum website provides resources for teachers, students and others keen to know more about women’s history. A key activity of AWHF is the celebration each March of Women’s History Month.

    Links to relevant sites, including history, non-government women’s organisations, libraries, archives and research centres.

  • The Australian Women’s History Network Links page which connects to feminist journals, academic blogs, webpages of gender organisations & projects (& I’ve included a few of these below too).

  • The Australian Women's Register, Australia's premier online archival resource discovering, promoting and preserving the diverse stories of Australian women, past and present (from sportswomen & migrants to scientists & parliamentarians, containing 7043 entries with references to 4298 archival resources, 9048 published resources & 1302 digital resources.Item description

  • The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia - A resource for anyone interested in the history of women and leadership in twentieth-century Australia.

  • National Library of Australia eResources for Women’s Studies - includes ~ Archives of Sexuality and Gender: International Perspectives on LGBTQ Activism and Culture ~ Women's Studies Archive: Voice and Vision ~ Gerritsen Collection: Women's History Online, 1543-1945: Just use you NLA card (here’s how to get one).

  • International Repositories, Projects and Spaces

    The below alphabetical directory is a work in progress and consists of international feminist libraries and archives that we are aware of. We are also aware that there are many wonderful, new projects that might not be on our radar yet.

  • These reading lists are provided as a resource to academics, students, international scholars not familiar with Australian scholarship, and the community at large. They can be used to delve into new research topics, or to add feminist or gendered perspectives into course content. It is also a means of promoting the incredibly rich scholarship that has been and continues to be produced in Australia on gender history, much of it by our members.

  • The main purposes of this virtual library are to list women's history institutions and organizations, locate archival and library collections, and provide links to Internet resources on women's history. In addition, also included are a list of women's studies journals and a few comprehensive link collections useful as a starting point for searching the Internet for women's studies in general.

  • Multicultural American women are overlooked in most mainstream approaches to U.S. history, so the National Women’s History Project champions their accomplishments and leads the drive to write women back into history.

  • Rise Up! is a digital archive of feminist activism in Canada from the 1970s to the 1990s. We were part of a worldwide wave of liberation and anti-oppression movements that won some victories, changed some attitudes, and radically altered the gendered and political landscape.

    This site is dedicated to documenting and sharing these histories.

  • A network of libraries, archives, and information centres across Europe. The purpose of the network is to provide a common platform to help facilitate discussion and information-sharing in the areas of gender, feminist and women’s studies and research. Currently more than 50 organizations from many countries are members of WINE.

  • The aim of the WHAI is to promote research into the history of women in Ireland, to bring together scholars in Irish women’s history, to recognise excellence in research and to promote public engagement with women’s history in an Irish context.

    This ever-growing bibliography brings together works in Irish gender and women’s history

  • The aim of the WHAI is to promote research into the history of women in Ireland, to bring together scholars in Irish women’s history, to recognise excellence in research and to promote public engagement with women’s history in an Irish context.

    This ever-growing bibliography brings together works in Irish gender and women’s history

museums & other specialised sites

  • We are the first and only museum in the world dedicated to celebrating girlhood. We are led by a global team dedicated to researching, interpreting, and preserving girls’ history and culture.

    By equitably including girls and centering their voices and experiences, we foster new discussions that challenge traditional gender norms, provide inspiration, and foster true gender equality. Each year, we produce Exhibits, Collaborative Projects, Educational Activities, and Publications that help you explore girlhood in the past and present. Explore our museum using the image links below.

  • Her Place Museum ~ Women’s Museum of Australia includes virtual tours eg UNMASKED: Celebrating Nursing and Midwifery, Victoria and Beyond, and RE-IMAGINING THE WOMEN'S MURAL.

  • The National Women's History Museum (USA) explores biographies and articles about women making history.

  • Women’s Museum of Ireland includes exhibits on activism, labour, art, architecture, fashion, medicine, film, politics, science and more.

blogs

  • National Library of Australia Blog - general but includes stories on women’s archives etc eg ‘This is what a feminist looks like’ (2020).

  • NOTCHES is a collaborative and international history of sexuality blog that aims to get people inside and outside the academy thinking about sexuality in the past and in the present.

  • The Business of Women’s Words: Purpose and Profit in Feminist Publishing (BOWW) explores the dramatic story of the feminist publishing revolution that unfolded during the UK Women’s Movements [WLM] of the 1970s, 80s and 90s, and their legacies for social movement inspired creative industries today.

  • VIDA: Blog of the Australian Women’s History Network whose goal is to create an open-access blog that makes knowledge of the history of feminism, in Australia and around the world, accessible, approachable, and inspiring.

  • The Women’s History Network Blog (UK) - For anyone with a passion for women’s history.

  • Women's History Sources Blog - About New and Notable Primary Sources & Exhibitions in Archives, Libraries, and Museums - US in focus initially but growing.

  • Women’s Museum of Ireland Blog - eg ‘Did your granny have a hammer?’ - Tracking down the objects of the Irish women’s suffrage movement’ (2016).

general digital resources

  • CAIN Web Service, Conflict and Politics in Northern Ireland, links to writings, images, chronologies etc on the Troubles in the north of Ireland.

  • Internet Archive is a non-profit library of millions of free books, movies, software, music, websites, and more.

  • Radical Online Collections and Archives, New Historical Express blog, links to freely available scanned and digitised radical literature from around the world.

  • Part library, part digital classroom, SUNU Studies, an educational supplement to SUNU Journal, serves as a means to decentralize + democratize education concerning Pan-African culture, politics, society, economy and art. SUNU Studies provides texts sourced from the public domain, and will continue to update with resources in order to build a comprehensive, working syllabus. In addition to making readings available, SUNU Studies will also provide audio-visual material. Translations of materials will be made if/wherever available.

    SUNU Journal invites scholars + practitioners (independent or part of an institution) to serve as guest lecturers for SUNU Studies. We invite such persons to submit a recorded lecture (video and/or audio recording) on a theme/idea/text relevant to the values of SUNU Journal. More details on how to be a SUNU Studies guest lecturer, can be found here.

  • Search the National Library of Australia’s Trove to explore amazing collections from Australian libraries, universities, museums, galleries & archives. It’s free & available online all day, every day & has digital copies of newspapers, Government Gazettes, maps, magazines & newsletters. Or books, pictures, photographs, archived websites, music & interviews. Even information about famous Australians, including copies of letters, diaries & personal archives.

teaching resources

  • Teaching Resources: The explosion of feminist energy from the late 1960s to the 1990s created a renaissance of fresh ideas, intense activism, new political questions, original theories, innovative ways of organizing, and emerging alliances. A key goal of the Rise Up! archive is to make this legacy accessible to new generations of students and researchers, both to strengthen the historical record and to foster and encourage the feminist energy of the present.

    We encourage you to share your ideas and resources for using this website in teaching.

    Online Resources

    Assignments

    Lesson Plans

  • Digital Classroom Resources ~ The National Women's History Museum (USA) explores classroom-ready resources created by the Museum and through the "For Educators, by Educators" initiative. There are lesson plans, biographies, posters, primary sources, and more. You can search by topic, theme, or resource type.