Título:
And yet they persisted : how American women won the right to vote / Johanna Neuman.
ISBN:
9781119530831
Autor personal:
Información de publicación:
Hoboken, NJ : Wiley Blackwell, 2020.
©2020
Descripción física:
xiv, 268 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Contenido:
The dawn of republican motherhood -- Female activism in Antebellum America -- From female influence to women's rights -- The Fifteenth Amendment -- The states as incubators for social change -- The coloring of the electorate -- The tactical turn in women's suffrage -- Male suffragists and the limits of self-interest -- Campaigning in wartime -- The long road to ratification -- The Voting Rights Act of 1965 and beyond.
Síntesis:
Most suffrage histories begin in 1848, when Elizabeth Cady Stanton first publicly demanded the right to vote at the Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York. And they end in 1920, when Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify the 19th Amendment, removing sexual barriers to the vote. And Yet They Persisted traces agitation for the vote over two centuries, from the revolutionary era to the civil rights era, excavating one of the greatest struggles for social change in this country and restoring African American women and other women of color to its telling. In this sweeping history, author Johanna Neuman demonstrates that American women defeated the male patriarchy only after they convinced men that it was in their interests to share political power. Reintegrating the long struggle for the women's suffrage into the metanarrative of U.S. history, Dr. Neuman sheds new light on such questions as: Why it took so long to achieve equal voting rights for women; How victories in state suffrage campaigns pressured Congress to act ; Why African American women had to fight again for their rights in 1965 ; How the struggle by eight generations of female activists finally succeeded.
DAK_OCLC_NUMBER:
on1110122372
Disponibilidad:
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