June Purvis is a British historian and emeritus professor of women's and gender history at the University of Portsmouth. She is known for her scholarship on the British womenâÂÂs suffrage movement, feminist historiography, and the life and activism of Emmeline Pankhurst.
Purvis studied sociology and history before undertaking postgraduate research focusing on womenâÂÂs education and the social construction of gender roles. Her early academic work examined the experiences of girls and women within the British education system, a theme that later shaped her contributions to womenâÂÂs history.
Purvis spent the majority of her academic career at the University of Portsmouth, where she helped establish and expand women's and gender history as a field of research and teaching. She supervised postgraduate students and contributed to curriculum development in womenâÂÂs studies and feminist history.
From 2014 to 2018, Purvis served as Chair of the WomenâÂÂs History Network UK, and from 2015 to 2020 she acted as Treasurer of the International Federation for Research in WomenâÂÂs History. She organised the WomenâÂÂs History Network Annual Conference, held at the University of Portsmouth on 31 AugustâÂÂ1 September 2018, titled Campaigns for WomenâÂÂs Suffrage: National and International Perspectives.
Purvis is also the editor of Women's History Review, an academic journal that publishes research on womenâÂÂs and gender history.
PurvisâÂÂs research focuses on womenâÂÂs and gender history in Britain between the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She has written extensively on the WomenâÂÂs Social and Political Union (WSPU) and has contributed to debates on feminist biography, gendered political activism, and the historiography of the suffrage movement.
She is particularly known for her revisionist biography of Emmeline Pankhurst, which challenges traditional portrayals of militant suffrage activism and has been widely cited within suffrage studies. PurvisâÂÂs work also includes analyses of womenâÂÂs education, feminist pedagogy, and the social expectations placed on girls in the Victorian and Edwardian eras.
Her research interests include:
Purvis has contributed to numerous academic journals, edited collections, conferences, and public history initiatives related to women's rights and feminist history outreach.