Tardis

New to Doctor Who or returning after a break? Check out our guides designed to help you find your way!

READ MORE

Tardis
Advertisement
Tardis
StubTab
Feminism

Jamie McCrimmon expressed old-fashioned values about the roles of men and women, often seeing it as his duty to protect the ladies, even when they rebuked him with modern concepts of feminism and women's suffrage. (TV: The Invasion, The War Games)

In 2700 BC Mesopotamia, the Seventh Doctor told Ace, who had failed to convince En-Gula to give up being a temple priestess, that it was a few thousand years too early to start feminism. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Genesys)

In London in 1912, the First Doctor, Vicki, and Steven encountered the suffragettes, a feminist movement for equal voting rights for women. (AUDIO: The Suffering) However, the First Doctor had a more traditional attitude to women's rights, describing women as "the fairer sex", describing a male nurse as seeming "a little improbable", and (after seeing that his TARDIS had not been dusted) saying that Polly must have not have been around anymore. (TV: Twice Upon a Time)

Rachel Edwards thought that Americans were silly for seriously thinking that Hillary Clinton was a feminist. (PROSE: Head of State)

Jo commented that it was "about time that women's lib was brought to Draconia". (TV: Frontier in Space)

Feminists whom the Doctor met or even travelled with were Isobel Watkins, (TV: The Invasion) Dr Ruth Ingram (TV: The Time Monster) and Sarah Jane Smith. (TV: The Time Warrior)

When Ng claimed that men shouted more at SatNavs with female voices, St John Colchester claimed that that was said only by liars and feminists. (AUDIO: Changes Everything)

By the 2600s, the Feminist Lesbian Alliance Against Derogatory Stereotypes had been established. (AUDIO: The Worst Thing in the World)

On the Inferno Earth feminism, known as Female Emancipation, was strongly supported by the totalitarian British government. Old-fashioned social attitudes toward the rights of women were abolished and all professions; including politics, the military, and science, were considered acceptable careers for women to pursue. (PROSE: I, Alastair) By the 1970s sexism was a severe social taboo. Greg Sutton's chauvinistic attitude to women, considered normal on 1970s N-Space Earth, was regarded as a serious flaw in his personality by regime-loyalists. (TV: Inferno)

Advertisement