Victorian Britain had its own anti-vaxxers – and they helped bring down a government.

Gatherer, Derek and Deignan, Alice and Sanderson, Chris (2023) Victorian Britain had its own anti-vaxxers – and they helped bring down a government. The Conversation.

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Abstract

As the 1906 UK general election results rolled in, it became clear that the Conservative party, after 11 years in power, had suffered one of the most disastrous defeats in its history. Of 402 Conservative MPs, 251 lost their seats, including their candidate for prime minister, defeated on a 22.5% swing against him in the constituency he had held for two decades. Rising food prices, unpopular taxes and an opposition that promised to spend heavily on an expanded welfare state all contributed to the Tory downfall that year. But something else had tipped the opposition Liberal landslide over the edge – compulsory vaccination.

Item Type:
Other
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? vaccine hesitancyvictorian englandpolemical pamphletsparliamentary legislationcorpus linguisticsvaccinationsmallpoxcompulsory vaccinationyes - externally fundedno ??
ID Code:
211734
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
19 Dec 2023 09:15
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Dec 2023 09:15