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The advocates of woman suffrage and black suffrage came to a bitter
falling-out in the midst of Reconstruction, when Elizabeth Cady
Stanton opposed the 15th Amendment for granting black men the right
to vote but not women. How did these two causes, so long allied,
come to this? In a lively narrative of insider politics, betrayal,
deception, and personal conflict, Fighting Chance offers fresh
answers to this question and reveals that racism was not the only
cause, but that the outcome also depended heavily on money and
political maneuver. Historian Faye Dudden shows that Stanton and
Susan B. Anthony, believing they had a fighting chance to win woman
suffrage after the Civil War, tried but failed to exploit windows
of political opportunity, especially in Kansas. When they became
most desperate, they succeeded only in selling out their long-held
commitment to black rights and their invaluable friendship and
alliance with Frederick Douglass. Based on extensive research,
Fighting Chance is a major contribution to women's history and to
19th-century political history.
The advocates of woman suffrage and black suffrage came to a bitter
falling-out in the midst of Reconstruction, when Elizabeth Cady
Stanton opposed the 15th Amendment because it granted the vote to
black men but not to women. How did these two causes, so long
allied, come to this? Based on extensive research, Fighting Chance
is a major contribution to women's history and to 19th-century
political history-a story of how idealists descended to racist
betrayal and desperate failure.
The first time a villain ever tied someone to the railroad tracks,
in a nineteenth-century play entitled Under the Gaslight, it was a
man who was tied down and a woman who cut him loose. In spite of
the era's commonly held assumption that woman's place was in the
home, the presence of actresses on stage and the roles that some of
them played defied traditional stereotypes of submissive
femininity. Around the same time, however, women in the theatre
were being reduced to passive sex objects by the new "leg shows"
flourishing on the New York stage. This book deals with theatre's
two standing offers to women--transformation and
objectification--during the period when the American entertainment
industry was taking shape and the first women's rights movement
emerged. Through a series of vivid biographical sketches of female
performers and managers, Faye Dudden provides a provocative
discussion of the conflicting messages conveyed by the early
theatre about what it meant to be a woman. According to Dudden,
theatre in the early republic was predominantly an aural experience
and a marginal, fly-by-night operation, and women were able to find
opportunities for successful careers as performers and managers.
But after 1860, as the theatre was organized by entrepreneurs into
a more systematic, profit-seeking enterprise, women's opportunities
narrowed. They were increasingly excluded from management, and the
commercial popularity of visual spectacles focused attention on
their bodies rather than on their acting abilities. Dudden's lively
study thus provides new insights into the relations among gender,
popular culture, and American capitalism, showing how women became
products in the entertainment marketplace even as they sought
increased freedom in their everyday world.
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