The Woman in American HistoryAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1971 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 18
Page 31
... equal became transformed into a political promise : " If all men are not actually equal , they should be . " It was inevitable that , sooner or later , women would ask : " If all men are created equal , why not women ? " Equality of ...
... equal became transformed into a political promise : " If all men are not actually equal , they should be . " It was inevitable that , sooner or later , women would ask : " If all men are created equal , why not women ? " Equality of ...
Page 79
... equal , why not woman ? If woman was equal , why should she not do anything men might do - speak in public , vote , hold office , even lead organizations ? Once these questions had been raised , it was only a very short step to the next ...
... equal , why not woman ? If woman was equal , why should she not do anything men might do - speak in public , vote , hold office , even lead organizations ? Once these questions had been raised , it was only a very short step to the next ...
Page 83
... equal to the task , the convention was presided over by James Mott . The speeches and resolutions stated a bold doctrine : woman was the equal of man and had the right and duty to participate " in all righteous causes , " to speak in ...
... equal to the task , the convention was presided over by James Mott . The speeches and resolutions stated a bold doctrine : woman was the equal of man and had the right and duty to participate " in all righteous causes , " to speak in ...
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Common terms and phrases
accepted active amendment American Anthony army became birth Boston campaign career Carrie cause century Charlotte child church cities Civil College colonial concerned continued contribution death early economic efforts Elizabeth equal established federal female feminist field followed force Frances girls helped House husband ideas industrial institutions interests labor ladies later leaders legislation lives major male Margaret married Mary ment Michigan mother movement NAWSA never nurses opportunities organization party percent period pioneer political poor position practice President Press Quaker raised reform role Sanger Senate served slave social society soldiers South southern status struggle Susan teachers tion took trade traditional Union United University vote winning woman suffrage women workers writers York
References to this book
Theories of Women's Studies Gloria Bowles,Renate Duelli-Klein,Renate Klein No preview available - 1983 |