This work is a survey of the efforts through which women have
changed their place in American society from the nation's founding
to the present. Examining the historical struggle for suffrage,
legal and property rights, and rights in the work place, the
authors show how these experiences have shaped a contemporary
movement for economic, political, and social equality that has
become increasingly independent and less and less likely to place
women's issues second to other national concerns.
The authors recount a history of women activists who repeatedly
set aside their own issues in favor of others that seemed more
pressing--from abolition and preserving the Union, to labor
solidarity in the 1920s, and civil rights and the New Left in the
1960s and 1970s. Male domination of these movements and a lack of
support for women's issues have been major factors in creating the
contemporary feminist philosophy of going it alone. The book is
divided into three topical sections, each of which offers a
historical analysis and draws on a variety of sources such as legal
statutes and judicial decisions, demographic information, public
opinion polls, and biographies and other narrative accounts. It is
a richly documented resource for courses and research in women's
studies, sociology, politics, and U.S. legal and political
history.
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