Public Women, Public Words: A Documentary History of American Feminism, 2. sējums

Pirmais vāks
Dawn Keetley, John Pettegrew
Rowman & Littlefield, 1997 - 523 lappuses
An expansive assemblage of historical sources recounts a public history written and spoken by women from colonial America to the end of the 19th century. Introductions to each of the sections place the documents (which include little-known texts as well as the classics) within their cultural and historical context, providing biographical information for each author. The texts are ordered chronologically, often subdivided by topics such as revolutionizing the family and relations between the sexes; education and women's literary culture; the anti-slavery movement; suffrage and other essential rights; and the professions and higher education. Paper edition (unseen), $19.95. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
 

Atlasītās lappuses

Saturs

I What Is Feminism?
1
1 The Solitude of Self 1892
5
2 Suffragism Not Feminism 1909
9
3 The Tragedy of Womans Emancipation 1910
10
4 The Younger Suffragists 1913
14
5 Feminism 1913
17
6 What Is Feminism? 1914
20
7 Feminist Mass Meeting 1914
24
62 Womans Vote and Womans Chains 1922
256
63 Is Woman Suffrage Failing? 1924
258
64 A Test for the Modern Woman 1932
263
65 Is Feminism Dead? 1935
267
66 That MuchMaligned Feminism 1935
272
67 We Women Throw Our Votes Away 1948
275
II Equality versus Difference
280
68 The Conflict between Human and Female Feminism 1914
285

8 A Feminist Symposium 1914
27
9 The Liberation of a Sex 1913
32
10 The Psychic Side of Feminism 1915
35
11 What Is Feminism? 1916
39
II Early Feminist Scholarship
45
12 PresentDay Problems in the Education of Women 1897
49
in Womens College and University Education 1908
53
14 The Mental Traits of Sex 1903
62
15 Politics and Warfare 1910
64
16 Why Women Are So 1912
69
17 Sex 1915
76
18 The Woman Movement and the Larger Social Situation 1915
79
19 Science and Feminism 1916
88
III Public Housekeeping
94
20 The Subjective Value of Social Settlements 1892
103
21 A Function of the Social Settlement 1899
111
22 Women and Public Housekeeping 1910
114
23 An Extension of the Conference Spirit 1904
115
the Plantation Woman 1904
117
25 Aims and Principles of the Consumers League 1899
119
The Larger Housekeeping 1912
124
27 Helping the Widowed Mother to Keep a Home 1913
130
28 Maternity Benefits and Reformers 1916
134
29 Wages for Mothers 1920
135
IV The Fight for Woman Suffrage
139
30 NAWSA Declaration of Principles 1904
150
31 The Protective Value of the Ballot 1900
151
32 The South Suffrage and the Educational Requirement 1903
154
33 Woman Suffrage 1905
161
34 A Womans Argument against Woman Suffrage 1908
163
35 What Will Woman Suffrage Convention Do for the Working Woman? 1908
167
A Sure Cure for AntiSuffragitis 1909
169
38 Organizing to Win by the Political District Plan 1914
170
39 Proposed Plan of the Congressional Union 1914
177
40 The Susan B Anthony Amendment 1916
181
41 National Suffrage and the Race Problem 1914
183
42 The Threefold Menace 1913
184
44 The Crisis 1916
195
45 My Position on the Different Policies of the National Association and the Congressional Union 1916
201
World War I 1917
203
47 Excuses for White House Picketing 1917
206
48 The Militant Campaign 1919
207
49 The Strange Ladies 1921
210
50 Women Are Free at Last in All the Land 1920
213
51 What Next? 1920
214
Feminist Politics Beyond Suffrage
223
I Political Mobilization
225
52 The Victory Convention 1920
233
53 Now We Can Begin 1920
236
54 Alice Pauls Convention 1921
238
55 Alice Paul Pulls the Strings 1921
240
56 National Convention of the National Womans Party 1921
243
57 Woman and the New Race 1920
245
58 THE NATION The White Womans Burden 1921
248
59 The Womans Party and the Violation of the 19th Amendment 1921
252
60 The Negro Woman in Politics 1922
254
61 Women as Leaders Nationally and Racially 1925
256
69 What Women Won in Wisconsin 1922
286
Why the Womans Party Is for It 1924
289
Why Other Womens Groups Oppose It 1924
291
72 Working Womens Case against Equal Rights 1924
294
73 Should There Be Labor Laws for Women? No 192 5
298
74 Should There Be Labor Laws for Women? Yes 192 5
302
75 Sex and Achievement 1935
308
76 The Womens Charter 1937
311
77 Beware of Womens Charter 1937
313
78 How Can We Raise Womens Status? A Symposium 1938
314
Should Congress Approve the Proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution? 1943
319
Should Congress Approve the Proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution? 1943
326
81 An Equal Rights Amendment 1952
332
82 Women in the Modern World 1953
334
III Work Labor and Socialism
341
83 The New York Shop Girl 1908
347
84 The Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker 1910
349
85 The Triangle Fire 19111967
357
86 Socialism and the Feminist Movement 1914
359
87 Low Wages and White Slavery 1912
362
88 My Experience as a Clerk in a Government Department 191719181940
363
89 The Colored Woman in Industry 1918
369
90 Two Million Negro Women at Work 1922
373
91 Faith That Moved a Dump Heap 1941
376
92 PostWar Program Proposal 1919
382
93 Women Workers and the A F of L 1921
384
94 What the Womens Bureau Has Accomplished 1930
387
95 Women and Machines 1921
390
96 You Dont Need a Vote to Raise Hell 1925
396
97 Women on the Breadlines 1932
400
98 Negro Women in OrganizationLabor 1941
404
99 Women under Capitalism 1934
405
100 Women and Communism 1935
412
101 Woman against Myth 19471948
421
102 UE Fights for Women Workers 1952
429
103 A Strategy for the Womens Movement 1972
441
IV War and Peace
448
104 Program for Constructive Peace 1915
452
105 Women and War 1915
453
106 Women and War 1940
455
107 Defense and Girls 1941
463
108 Women Enlist Now 1941
465
109 We Too Must Fight This War 1942
466
110 A Womans Manifesto 1947
471
111 You Can Vote for Peace 1952
476
112 One Day Strike for Peace 1962
478
113 AntiDraft and Womens Rights 1967
480
Revolution in the Revolution 1968
482
115 Testimony before the 1968 Platform Committee of the Democratic National Convention on Behalf of Women Strike for Peace 1968
483
116 A Womans Declaration of Liberation from Military Domination 1970
486
117 The Longest Day of the Longest War 1971
487
119 Speech at the Womens Anti Imperialist Rally 1970
488
First Report on a Rocky Romance 1977
490
Index
501
About the Editors
521
Autortiesības

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