Opening Up Space: A Lovely Technofeminist Opportunity

Divorce Standards and Legislative Work

Frances Power Cobbe made sure her opinions, no matter how radical they seemed, were heard. This page includes a couple of her works regarding women and animal rights and mentions in the newspaper about her achievements.

In 1875, Cobbe founded the National-Anti-Vivisection Society in London that campaigned against animal experiments. A year after its foundation, Cobbe published this Cruelty to Animals Act (1876) which details the regulation and control of vivisection with limited number of licences per year and prohibited the public display of vivisection. This act remained active 110 years after its publication, until it was replaced by the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act in 1986 (Society., National Antivisection).




The following newspaper article published in 1993 praised Frances Power Cobbe's involvement in issues that weren't fought by the masses like mainly animal rights but also mentions her advocacy for women's rights.


Cobbe's stance of divorce concurs to the duties she laid out in Lecture IV. She views marriage as an equal union, where the union is supposed to push each other for the better, and not find solace or comfort in doing northing or being selfish for one another: “If the wife from the first cherishes every spark of generous feeling and noble and disinterested ambition in her husband, and he in his turn, encourages her in every womanly charity and good deed [...] their sacred and blessed union brings them together to the very gates of heaven” (135). Because of this idea, Cobbe thinks that divorce is righting an appalling wrong which is an unhappy marriage. The following article (page 453-454) explains how Cobbe believes that divorce should be available to every women, and not just the wealthy women, but the working women as well, if the husband is being physically abusive or torture.



  

 

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