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Elizabeth Cady Stanton - Susan B. Anthony Reader Correspondence, Writing, Speeches

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ISBN-10: 1555531431

ISBN-13: 9781555531430

Edition: 1992 (Revised)

Authors: Ellen Carol DuBois, Gerda Lerner

List price: $29.95
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Description:

The documents delineate the progress of American reform politics from Stanton's speech at Seneca Falls in 1848 into the early twentieth century, when a conflict developed between the two feminists over woman suffrage. In her new introduction, Ellen Carol DuBois considers the current historiographical perspective on Stanton and Anthony.
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Book details

List price: $29.95
Copyright year: 1992
Publisher: Northeastern University Press
Publication date: 10/30/1992
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 288
Size: 5.50" wide x 8.25" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 0.880
Language: English

Gerda Lerner, author of twelve books in women's history, was one of the founders of the field in the 1960s. Her creative scholarship, her organizing work on behalf of women historians, and her leadership in graduate education have been widely recognized and honored. She is past president of the Organization of American Historians, Robinson-Edwards Professor Emerita of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and visiting professor of history at Duke University. Her most recent book is Fireweed: A Political Autobiography.

Foreword
Introduction to the Revised Edition
From the Introduction to the 1981 Edition
1815-1861
Introductionp. 2
Document 1: Stanton, "Address Delivered at Seneca Falls," July 19, 1848p. 27
Document 2: Anthony, Letter on temperance, August 26, 1852; Stanton, "Appeal for the Maine Law," January 21, 1853p. 36
Document 3: Stanton, "Address to the Legislature of New York on Women's Rights," February 14, 1854p. 44
Document 4: Stanton and Anthony, Letters, 1852-1859p. 53
Document 5: Anthony, Diary of a lecture tour with Ernestine Rose to Washington, Baltimore, and Philadelphia, 1854p. 70
Document 6: Stanton, "Speech to the Anniversary of the American Anti-Slavery Society," 1860p. 78
1861-1873
Introductionp. 88
Document 7: Stanton, "Speech at Lawrence, Kansas," 1867p. 113
Document 8: Stanton, "Gerrit Smith on Petitions"p. 119
Document 9: Stanton, "Speech to The McFarland-Richardson Protest Meeting," May, 1869p. 125
Document 10: Stanton, "Home Life," c. 1875p. 131
Document 11: Anthony, "Suffrage and the Working Woman," 1871p. 139
Document 12: Anthony, "Homes of Single Women," October, 1877p. 146
Document 13: Anthony, "Constitutional Argument," 1872p. 152
Document 14: Stanton, "Proposal to Form a New Party," May, 1872p. 166
1874-1906
Introductionp. 172
Document 15: Letters to Anthony in support of woman suffrage, 1880p. 201
Document 16: Stanton, "Address of Welcome to the International Council of Women," March 25, 1888p. 208
Document 17: Anna Howard Shaw, "Aunt Susan," 1890p. 216
Document 18: Stanton, "Address to the Founding Convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association," February, 1890p. 222
Document 19: Stanton, "Introduction" and Commentaries on Genesis, Chapters 1-4, The Woman's Bible; Anthony, Response to the NAWSA resolution disavowing The Woman s Bible; Stanton, Draft of "Criticism of Bigotry of Women"p. 228
Document 20: Stanton, "The Solitude of Self," January 18, 1892p. 246
Document 21: Anna Howard Shaw, "The Passing of Aunt Susan"; Helen Gardener, "Elizabeth Cady Stanton"p. 255
Supplementary Documents
Document 22: Phrenological Reports, 1853p. 269
Document 23: Stanton and Anthony, Letters, July 24, 1895 - October 26, 1902p. 277
Indexp. 301
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.