Preface
Introduction
Nancy A. Hewitt
Part I The Cultural and Political Struggles for Enfranchisement
1 "The Radicalism of the Woman Suffrage Movement: Notes toward the
Reconstruction of Nineteenth-Century Feminism" Ellen Carol
DuBoiś
2 "Mormon Women, Suffrage, and Citizenship at the 1893 Chicago
World's Fair" Andrea G. Radke-Moss
3 "Suffrage and Spectacle" Mary Chapman and Barbara Green
4 "From Prisons and Prisoners" Lady Constance Lytton
5 "'Whether We Vote or Not--We are Going to Shoot': Women and Armed
Defense on the Home Front" Kimberly Jensen
6 "Unsightly Evidence: 'Female Inversion' and the U.S. Woman
Suffrage Movement" Laura L. Behling
Part II Winning and Wielding the Ballot
7 "Fighting for Rights in the 1910s and 1920s" (Excerpt) Julie
A. Gallagher
8 "New Women" Nancy A. Hewitt
9 "We Just Kept Going" Carolyn Daniels
10 "Race, Class, and Gender: Prospects of an All-Inclusive
Sisterhood" Bonnie Thornton Dill
11 "Sources of Political Unity and Disunity among Women: Placing
the Gender Gap in Perspective" Leonie Huddy, Erin Cassese, and
Mary-Kate Lizotte
12 "The Gender Gap: A Comparison across Racial and Ethnic
Groups" M. Margaret Conway
List of Original Publications
Contributors
Index
Dawn Durante is editor in chief at the University of Texas Press. Nancy A. Hewitt is Distinguished Professor Emerita at Rutgers University.
"From the brutal imprisonment narratives that roused a nation's sympathies to the suffragists' plight to the 'gender gap' in contemporary voting, this text is a rich collection of University of Illinois Press works on the American women's suffrage quest and its aftermath. 100 Years of Women's Suffrage highlights rarely discussed regional and racial approaches in the fight for women's 'first class citizenship' through a fascinating mix of primary accounts and historical and gender studies essays. A recommended anthology that rightly honors the Nineteenth Amendment's centennial."--Michelle R. Scott, author of Blues Empress in Black Chattanooga: Bessie Smith and the Emerging Urban South "Offering a unique and creative way to reflect on the suffrage movement, this anthology includes a full gamut of suffrage-related topics and controversies. This collection from years of scholarship from some of the most important scholars of women and voting will enrich our understanding of the subject in all its diversity and range. In revisiting the arguments, it will assuredly prompt new scholarship on the movement."--Susan Goodier, coauthor of No Votes for Women: The New York State Anti-Suffrage Movement
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