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The Women's Suffrage Movement

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An intersectional anthology of works by the known and unknown women that shaped and established the suffrage movement, in time for the 2020 centennial of women's right to vote, with a foreword by Gloria Steinem Comprised of historical texts spanning two centuries, The Women's Suffrage Movement is a comprehensive and singular volume that covers the major issues and figures involved in the movement, with a distinctive focus on diversity, incorporating race, class, and gender, and illuminating minority voices. In an effort to spotlight the many influential voices that were excluded from the movement, the writings of well-known suffragists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony are featured alongside accounts of Native American women who inspired suffragists like Matilda Joslyn Gage to join the movement, as well as African American suffragists such as Sarah Mapps Douglas and Harriet Purvis, who were often left out of the conversation because of their race. The editor and introducer, Sally Roesch Wagner, is a pre-eminent scholar of the diverse backbone of the women's suffrage movement, the founding director of the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation, and serves on the New York State Women's Suffrage Commission.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 20, 2019
      Women’s studies scholar Wagner (She Who Holds the Sky: Matilda Joslyn Gage) assembles a hefty and somewhat idiosyncratic compendium of primary source documents that charts the long road to the passage of the 19th Amendment, the 100th anniversary of which will arrive in 2020. Wagner explains in the volume’s introduction that it’s impossible to create a definitive collection from such a large movement; instead, as editor, she functions as a “tour guide pointing out some high spots along the way.” Most of the sources come from white women, especially movement leaders such as Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The selections are sometimes odd: part one, “Women Voted Before the United States was Formed,” contains no documents from the colonial period nor any generated by Native American women, and the last chapter, on the final suffrage victory, contains only one source describing the amendment’s ratification in Tennessee. Selections in the intervening sections better illuminate the struggle for suffrage, including Stanton’s foundational “Declaration of Sentiments,” Anthony’s call for universal suffrage, and Mary Church Terrell’s examination of the 15th Amendment. Despite its length, this is—just as Wagner explains—not a comprehensive history of the movement, but the documents contained within are valuable and illuminating.

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  • English

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