Recounting the story of America's antebellum woman's rights
movement through the efforts of Lucy Stone (1818-1893), this
important account differs dramatically from those that focus almost
exclusively on Susan B. Anthony or Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Million
examines the social forces of the 1830s and 1840s that led Stone to
become a woman's reformer and her early agitation as a student at
Oberlin College, including what may well be the nation's first
strike for equal pay for women. Million chronicles not only the
public side of Stone, but her personal battles as well.
Considering a woman's right to self-sovereignty as the central
issue of the movement, Stone tried to prove that marriage need not
rob a woman of her autonomy. With Henry B. Blackwell, Stone
attempted to establish a marriage of truly equal partners, in which
she maintained her personal and financial independence. She worked
tirelessly during the 1850s, not only as the movement's
silver-tongued orator, but also as the organizer and manager of the
National Woman's Rights Conventions, champion of coeducation,
instigator of nation-wide petitioning efforts, and first person to
plead for women's equal legal rights before a body of lawmakers.
DEGREESLThe contributions of several prominent male leaders are
presented, along with coverage of agitation in New England and the
western states. Million also details the trials of motherhood that
eventually led Stone to pass leadership of the movement to Anthony
and Stanton on the eve of the Civil War.
General
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