Description |
211 pages ; 22 cm. |
Series |
The American ways series |
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American ways series.
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-203) and index. |
Contents |
The Woman's Era -- The new woman and the new politics -- Thinking about the woman question -- Feminism and the problem of sex -- War and victory -- After the vote -- The fate of the ERA. |
Summary |
In this book Jean Matthews chronicles the changing fortunes and transformations of the organized suffrage movement, from its period of declining numbers and campaign failures to its final victory in the Nineteenth Amendment that brought women the vote. She recaptures the personalities and ideas that characterized the movement in these years, drawing portraits and analyzing the intellectual currents--in politics, the economy, sexuality, and social thought--that competed for women's commitment. And she shows how new leadership and new strategies at last brought success in the long struggle that had seen many feminist leaders grow old. The rise of the new woman emphasizes the historical contexts, including progressivism, in which the women's movement operated; the disputes and tensions within the movement itself; and the perennial question of who was to be included and excluded in the quest for women's rights. It also considers the aftereffects of the 1920 constitutional victory, when women found themselves wondering what to do next. |
Subject |
Feminism -- United States -- History.
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Women's rights -- United States -- History.
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ISBN |
1566635004 hardback alkaline paper |
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1566635012 paperback alkaline paper |
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