Program Info:Return
WINGS #22-16 Suffragette Sash
A mysterious moment in the film Suffragette explained
Uploaded: 18 Sep, 2016
Recording Date: 15 Sep, 2016
Recording Location: London, UK; Vancouver and Denman Island, BC
Logsheet: none
Language: English
Topical for: Timeless
Status: Complete, Ready to Air
Copyright:

WINGS #22-16 Suffragette Sash by Parliamentary Radio for Women and WINGS: Women's International News Gathering Service is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at http://previous.ncra.ca/dspProgramDetail.cfm?programID=139809.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at parliamentaryradio.com.
Program Title: WINGS #22-16 Suffragette Sash
Description: In the British film Suffragette, a man pockets the Votes for Women sash that Emily Wilding Davison had been trying to put on the King's horse during the race. She was killed and became a martyr for the cause. A century later the sash turned up on public display at the British Parliament house, when Davison was finally honoured by the establishment. Here is that story.
Host(s): Frieda Werden
Featured Speakers/Guests: Linda Fairbrother and Boni Sones, Parliamentary Radio for Women; Helen Goodman, Labour party Media critic; MP Emily Thornberry, the Speaker of Parliament, and other MPs
Credits: Audio produced by Parliamentary Radio For Women - www.parliamentaryradio.com - adapted for WINGS and updated by Frieda Werden.
Comments: Updated from WINGS #16-13
Topic:
Politics > Feminism
Type:
Weekly Program
Regional > Europe Arts and Culture > Film Society and Culture > Women |
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Listen (h:mm:ss) 0:28:49 | WINGS 22-16SuffragetteSash-28_49-192kbps | Download (22) |
WINGS22-16SuffragetteSash-28_49-192kbps.mp3 | 41,501k 192kbps Mono |
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