![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWPiZPKHGpVf6RRCtzgfvbyQl6EhgPKk6LmbSo4KmwYRuJahR-6K2pvDV8dL1p9xJdTMISj3RkrkqsIu8ZOtIK9ctPjnWT3w9omwpYNoaG8kBOzrJM23U50wVonR69-8sYp0RS1LyJ_iE/s1600/Bj5a-9ZIUAAVUfq.jpg)
I've been invited by the lovely Roxy Brennan (
Shrieking Violet issue 21 contributor and
Two White Cranes singer), who programmes events at
Cafe Kino in Bristol, to do my
talk about the co-operative women's magazine
Woman's Outlook at Cafe Kino on Tuesday June 17, 7pm, free.
Facebook
event.
Woman's Outlook – a surprisingly modern magazine?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgok5vQJJg-uDeVY5_gjvnSjY6DtIWW5_e323hElMrnnC2IrcdMWRap3NBohLUgyUT9adVIeRccgGHtTR_3v3kmhmM9Gn6gdteBvPLgXEVRrqwit3K6ijE9LUjd-12GWyOTiKnBZCrmzOY/s1600/Outlook+cover.jpg)
For nearly five decades,
Woman’s Outlook was the voice of the
Co-operative Women’s Guild, the campaigning organisation which worked to raise the status of women both in the co-operative movement and in society, and its onetime editor
Mary Stott later became a longstanding editor of the Guardian women’s pages. From its origins in Manchester in 1919,
Outlook provided an enticing mixture of articles addressing both the personal and the political, combining fashion, fiction, features and recipes with advice for working women – in many ways, not dissimilar to the content of women’s magazines today!
‘
Woman’s Outlook: a surprisingly modern magazine?’ will explore some of the key issues addressed in
Outlook, and look at how the magazine encouraged women to get involved in campaigning for a better world.
Topics covered by
Outlook such as female representation in parliament, equal pay and healthy eating remain highly relevant today, and the talk will end by considering whether the type of content provided by 21st century women’s lifestyle magazines has really changed much since the days of
Outlook.
Research for the talk was undertaken in the National Co-operative Archive in Manchester, and I also conducted
interviews with some
inspiring women who were members of the co-operative women's movement at the time.
Please pass this on to anyone you think might be interested.