
This event explores the suffrage era as a site of artistic and political experimentation, tracing how struggles to extend the vote to women and the working classes intersected with modernist aesthetics, revolutionary politics, and lived experience.
Moving from the moral and social imaginaries of Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury milieu, through the feminist and formal innovations of Mina Loy, to the raw immediacy of Emmy Hennings’ semi-autobiographical novel Branded — shaped by her experiences of poverty, imprisonment, and sex work — the session considers how ideas of freedom, flourishing, and social transformation were negotiated across literary and artistic forms.
We will also situate these movements within broader revolutionary currents through figures such as Sylvia Pankhurst and Rosa Luxemburg, while opening the discussion to transnational and racialised perspectives, including Alice Dunbar-Nelson and Senedu Gebru.
Rather than advancing a single thesis, the event invites participants to think across these constellations, asking how suffrage might be understood not only as a political demand but as a field of avant-garde practices and competing visions of emancipation, suggesting that the reorganisation of form and the expansion of political voice may be understood as intertwined historical processes rather than separate developments.
Session Lead: Bradley Tuck
In Person: Southern Belle, 3, Waterloo Street, Hove
The venue is not wheelchair accessible
Click to join On Zoom
Meeting ID: 820 2090 4132
Passcode: 772785
Time: 6:30 pm Doors. Start 7:00 pm-9:30 pm.If for some reason you can't make it and you already bought a ticket, please release it so others can come to the event.
You can also email us at explodingappendix@gmail.com for any inquiries.
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