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VIRTUAL EVENT: Ideas of equality in 19th century women's higher education

01 June 2021, 2:00 pm–3:00 pm

Lecture hall seats. Image: Nathan Dumlao via Unsplash

This seminar explores the history of women’s education in the UK and looks at the Girton/Newnham debate.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Centre for Global Higher Education

In nineteenth century Britain, the liberal ideal of obtaining full citizenship and personhood through voting and education contributed to an interest in accessing the ballot and universities from half of the population excluded from such personhood: women. 

This webinar will explore a paper on the history of women’s education in the UK, which was concurrent with the initial expansion of mass and higher education, generally. 

However, evident in the foundation of the first women’s colleges at Cambridge, Oxford and elsewhere we find two ideas of equality advanced. 

The first, we call the ‘Newnham’ ideal, articulated by utilitarian philosopher Henry Sidgwick at Newnham College, Cambridge. This argued that examinations should be handicapped and adapted to women’s interests in order to maximise participation in university education. 

The second ideal, however, articulated by Emily Davies at Girton College, Cambridge argued that anything less than participation in the same examinations amounted to an acknowledgement of women’s inferiority – in other words, an affirmation of inequality. 

After establishing this distinction, we trace the legacy of each ideal across the following century as women’s access to education developed, up to and including the move towards co-education at Oxford in the 1970s.

Speaker

  • Eric Lybeck, Manchester Institute of Education (MIE)

Links

Image: Nathan Dumlao via Unsplash