The Woman in American HistoryAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1971 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 163
... political perspective and her practical and pragmatic understanding of political reality dis- tinguished her from most of the preceding presidents of the organization . In her first four years as president of NAWSA , from 1900 to 1904 ...
... political perspective and her practical and pragmatic understanding of political reality dis- tinguished her from most of the preceding presidents of the organization . In her first four years as president of NAWSA , from 1900 to 1904 ...
Page 168
... political prisoner " status , and finally resorted to hunger strikes . The authorities then proceeded to force - feed them , which resulted in their getting an enormous amount of pub- licity . The fact that the courts invalidated all ...
... political prisoner " status , and finally resorted to hunger strikes . The authorities then proceeded to force - feed them , which resulted in their getting an enormous amount of pub- licity . The fact that the courts invalidated all ...
Page 174
... political ambitions . These three governors simply exemplify the traditional subordinate role of women in politics brought up to date . The wives of Presidents , Senators , and candidates for office have traditionally performed an ...
... political ambitions . These three governors simply exemplify the traditional subordinate role of women in politics brought up to date . The wives of Presidents , Senators , and candidates for office have traditionally performed an ...
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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 |