The second volume in the six-volume series documenting the accomplishments of the two most famous American suffragists. Featured in Ken Burns's new documentary Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
Together the volumes in this set offer an extraordinary collection that tells a story-both personal and public, about abolition, temperance, and woman suffrage and provides the most extensive in-depth look at the lives and accomplishments ...
Their place inside the body-politic, 1887 to 1895
The selected papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony: Volume 6 an awful hush, 1895-1906
Taken together, these essays and documents reveal the different facets, enduring insights, and fascinating contradictions of the work of one of the great thinkers of the feminist tradition.
Stanton participated in transcendentalist writer Margaret Fuller's small-group conversations in Boston in 1843, when Fuller wrote the “The Great Lawsuit” and its expanded book form, Woman in the Nineteenth Century.63 Fuller argued that ...
Some British women adopted the term feminist; English suffragette Ethel Arnold gave a lecture on the feminist movement in . She believed the enfranchisement of women would raise their “whole mental and moral status” and ...
In its third edition this accessible and engaging collection of the writings of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony provides a critical overview of the lives, ideas and activism of two founders of the American feminist tradition.
Typical of clergymen's opinions was that expressed by the minister John Weiss of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who in 1854 wrote ''The Woman Question'' for the Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany. He sprinkled his essay with ...
It is destined to become a classic!" —Stuart Brock, Victoria University "This book is a superb primer on atheist philosophical thought that ranges from the obvious dispute with theism to the much broader intellectual implications of ...