American Feminism - Key Source Documents, 1848-1920 (Hardcover)



Contents:
Volume I: Suffrage
Edited and Introduced by Janet Beer
Janet Beer Introduction: The Woman Suffrage Movement in America - 1848-1920
1. The First Convention: Seneca Falls, including the Declaration of Sentiments [1848]
2. Lucretia Mott Discourse on Woman, Philadelphia [T.B. Peterson, 1850]
3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Worcester [1850] and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse [1852] Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852]
4. Matilda Gage to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse, Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852]
5. Theodore Parker A Sermon of the Public Function of Women, Women's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1853]
6. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper The Colored People in America, from The Colored People in America: Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects Philadelphia [1857]
7. Sojourner Truth Address to the American Equal Rights Association [1867]
8. Hamilton Wilcox Women are Voters! New York Suffrage Law [John W. Lovell Co., 1885]
9. Angelina French Newman Woman Suffrage in Utah [Government Print Office, 1886]
10. Henry Blair Woman Suffrage Speech to the Senate [1886]
11. Clara Benwick Colby The Ballot and the Bullet Theory The Woman's Tribune [Editor, 1883-86]
12. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Unsolved Problems in Woman Suffrage, reprinted from The Forum [Forum Publishing Company, 1887]
13. F.G. Adams The Women's Vote in Kansas [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1888]
14. Olympia Brown Woman's Suffrage a Political Necessity, abstract of address before the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, [January 28, 1889]
15. Lucy Stone Questions for Remonstrants [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
16. Olive Schreiner Three Dreams in a Desert [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
17. Various Authors, The Elective Franchise [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
18. Ednah D. Cheney Municipal Suffrage for Women [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
19. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Straight Lines or Oblique Lines? [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1893]
20. Henry Blackwell Objections to Woman Suffrage Answered [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1896]
21. Katherine A.G. Patterson, Helen G. Ecob et al Colorado Speaks for Herself [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1897]
22. Carrie Chapman Catt, Florence Kelley and Evelyn W. Ordway How the Women of New Orleans Discovered their Wish to Vote [Political Science Study Series, Vol. V. No. 4, 1900]
23. William M. Salter What is the Real Emancipation of Woman? [Woman Suffrage Association, 1902]
24. Marion B. Schlesinger, Mary A.E.M. Buckminster, and Mary Leavens Arguments in Favour of Woman Suffrage [Committee of the College Equal Suffrage Law, 1905]
25. Ida Husted Harper Suffrage a Right [North American Review Publishing Co., 1906]
26. Ida Husted Harper History of the Movement for Women Suffrage [Interurban Woman Suffrage Council, 1907]
27. Martha Carey Thomas New Fashioned Argument for Woman Suffrage [National American Women Suffrage Association, 1908]
28. Julia Ward Howe Woman and the Suffrage The Outlook [1909]
29. Max Eastman Woman's Suffrage and Sentiment [The Equal Franchise Society, 1909]
30. Lucia Ames Mead What Women Might Do with the Ballot [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1910]
31. Amelia MacDonald Cutler Six Reasons Why Farmers' Wives Should Vote [National American Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc., circa 1910]
32. The Truth versus Richard Barry [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1911]
33. Equal Suffrage Meeting [Frank Facey, 1911]
34. Women in the Home [California Equal Suffrage Association, circa 1911]
35. Ida Husted Harper How Six States Won Woman Suffrage [National American Woman's Suffrage Association, 1912]
36. Theodore Roosevelt Speech on Suffrage [Allied Printing, 1912]
37. Ella S. Stewart The Ballot for the Women of the Farm [Chicago, 1913]
38. Official Program, Woman Suffrage Procession [1913]
39. George Creel What Have Women Done with the Vote? [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1915]
40. Alice Stone Blackwell Jane Addams Testifies Woman's Journal [1915]
41. Alice Stone Blackwell Woman Suffrage [1915]
42. Edith Abbot Are Women a Force for Good Government? National Municipal Review Vo. IV, No.3 July [1915]
43. Mary Beard and Florence Kelley Why Women Demand a Federal Suffrage Amendment [Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, 1916]
44. Mrs. Guilford Dudley The Negro Votes in the South [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1918]
45. Carrie Chapman Catt An Address to the Legislatures of the United States [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., 1919]
Volume II: Work and Education
Edited and introduced by Anne-Marie Ford
Anne-Marie Ford Introduction: The Woman's Place
Part 1: Education
46. C.D.B Colby Concerning Farmers' Wives [New England Publishing Company, 1880]
47. Maria Mitchell The Collegiate Education of Girls [New England Publishing Company, 1881]
48. Kate Morris Cone The Gifts of Women to Educational Institutions [Association of Collegiate Alumnae, 1884]
49. Kate Holladay Claghorn The Problem of Occupation for College Women Educational Review March 1898, pp. 217-230
50. Sui Sin Far and Edith Maude Eaton Its Wavering Image Mrs. Spring Fragrance [1912]
51. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Simmons Bonnin 'The Ground Squirrel' and 'The Big Red Apples' from 'Impressions of an Indian Childhood', Atlantic Monthly [1900]
52. Francis Squire Potter Education and Democracy [College Equal Suffrage League, July 1909]
Part 2: Women's Work
53. Caroline Dall The Opening at the Gates The College, the Market and the Court, or Women's Relations to Education, Labor and Law [Boston, Lee and Shepherd, 1867]
54. May Wright Sewall A Report on the Position of Women in Industry and Education in the State of Indiana [Indiana Department of the New Orleans Exposition, 1885]
55. Agnes Nestor The Working Girl's Need of Suffrage [Literature of the Mississippi Valley Suffrage Conference, circa 1910]
56. Wages of Women in the Corset Factories in Massachusetts [Minimum Wage Commission, 1914.]
57. Maggie Hinchey Senators vs. Working Women [Wage Earners' Suffrage League, circa 1918.]
Part 3: The Rights and Wrongs of Women
58. Great Auction Sale of Slaves at Savannah, Georgia Tribune, March 1859, [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1859]
59. Southern Proofs of the 'Chivalrous and High-Minded Character' produced by slavery [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860]
60. Southern Proofs that Slavery is a 'Parental Relation' [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860]
Part 4: Angels of Mercy
61. Seventh Report of the Ladies' Aid Society of Philadelphia [1865]
62. C.E. Hopkins and E.C. Hobson A Report Concerning The Coloured Women of the South [Trustees of the John F. Slater Fund, 1896]
63. Anna Julia Cooper The Status of Woman in America A Voice from the South [The Aldine Printing House, 1892, pp.127-145]
64. N. Mosell, The Work of the Afro-American Woman, [G.S. Ferguson, 1894, reprinted 1908.]
65. Elise Johnson McDougald The Task of Negro Womanhood [The New Negro, ed. Alain Locke.]
66. The Fadettes Woman's Orchestra of Boston Boston Evening Transcript [14 August 1906]
67. Women's National Agricultural and Horticultural Association, May 1914
68. Edith Wharton 'Reverence' and 'The New Frenchwoman,' French Ways and Their Meaning New York and London [D. Appleton, 1919.]
Volume III: Health, Birth-Control and Prostitution
Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin
Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Female Body
69. Victoria Woodhull The Elixir of Life, or Why do We Die? [Woodhull and Clafin, 1873]
70. Mary Putman Jacobi A Question of Rest for Women During Menstruation [1877]
71. John Noyes Male Continence The Oneida Community [Office of the American Socialist, 1877]
72. Dr Elizabeth Blackwell The Human Element in Sex [J.&A. Churchill, 1894]
73. Maria E. Ward Bicycling for Ladies [Brentano's, 1896]
74. Police Records of Prostitution from 1907-1908 in The Records of the Enforcement of the Laws of Prostitution
75. Helen Keller The Modern Woman Metropolitan Magazine, 1912 [Congressional Record, September 17, 1913]
76. Dr. Anna Blount The Woman Voter and the Eugenic Ideal (c.1915) [Research Publications, Inc., 1977]
77. Dr. Marie Carmichael Stopes The Problem of Unrest SNE, volume 31
78. Margaret Sanger Family Limitation [Fifth Edition, 1916]
79. S. Adolphus Knopf Birth Control [A.R. Elliott Publishing Company, 1916]
80. Katharine Bushnell Plain Words to Plain People
81. Virginia Brooks Eliminating Vice from the Small City [Chicago]
82. M.P. Dowling, Paul L. Blakely and Austin O'Malley Race, Suicide, Birth Control [New York Press]
83. Florence Kelley and Alzina Stevens Wage Earning Children in Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895]
84. Caroline Hedger, M.D. The School Children of the Stockyards District, Reprinted from the Transactions of the Fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography, held at Washington D.D., September 23-28, 1912, [Washington Government Printing Office, 1913]
85. The Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor in Collaboration with the Women's Education and Industrial Union of Boston, 'Household Expenses,' [Wright and Potter Printing Company, 1900]
86. Jane Addams Increased Social Control in a New Conscience and an Ancient Evil [Macmillan, 1912]
87. Emma Goldman The Traffic in Women (1911), Red Emma Speaks edited by Alix Kates Shulman, [Random House, 1972]
88. Frances E. Willard The Beautiful in How to Win: A Book for Girls [Funk & Wagnalls, 1886]
89. Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women and Social Service, Address before the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government [November 14, 1907]
90. Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Emmeline Pethick Lawrence Does a Man Support his Wife? And Who Supports the Children? [National American Woman Suffrage Association]
Volume IV: Women's Clubs and Settlements
Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin
Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Gathering of Women
91. Mrs. Percy Pennybacker The Eighth Biennial Convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, No. 519 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
92. Sarah S. Platt Decker The Meaning of the Women's Club Movement, No. 513, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
93. Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman The Women's Clubs in the Middle-Western States, No.515 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
94. Mary Alden Ward The Influence of Women's Clubs in New England, and in the Middle-Eastern States, No. 514 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
95. 'Clara de Hirsche Home for Working Girls,' Pamphlet, [Keystone Printery New York, 1905]
96. Elizabeth Lindsay David Chapters 1 and 2 from The Story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs [Pamphlet, 1922]
97. Dorothea Moore The Work of Women's Clubs in California, No. 517, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
98. Mrs A.O Granger The Effect of Club Work in the South, No. 516 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
99. Frances E. Willard The Ballot for the Home, Equal Suffrage Leaflet, Volume VII, Number 2 [March 1898]
100. Eliza Daniel Stewart Memories of the Crusade: A Thrilling Account of the Great Uprising of the Women of Ohio in 1873, Against the Liquor Crime [Columbus: Wm. G. Hubbard and Co., 1888]
101. Alice Stone Blackwell Suffrage and Temperance [Woman Suffrage Association and the Woman's Journal, circa 1912]
102. Elizabeth Tilton Is Beer the Cure for the Drink Evil? The Survey February 24, [1917]
103. Jane Addams Hull House: A Social Settlement at 335 South Halstead Street [Privately Published, 1894]
104. Jane Addams The Subjective Value of Social Settlements Philanthropy and Social Progress [Thomas Y. Crowell & Company, 1893]
105. South End House: Its 18th Year of Cumulative Progress [March 1910]
106. Ellen Gates Starr Art and Labor Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895]
107. Florence Mabel Dedrick Our Sister or the Streets Fighting the Traffic in Young Girls or War on the White Slave Trade [G.S. Ball, 1910]
108. Lillian D. Wald Organizations within the Settlements in The House on Henry Street [Rinehart and Winston, 1915]
109. Jane Addams Women's Memories - Reacting on Life as Illustrated by the Story of the Devil Baby The Long Road of Woman's Memory [Macmillan, 1916]
110. Mary Antin The Law of the Fathers They Who Knock at Our Gates [Houghton Mifflin, 1914]
111. Anna Julia Cooper The Social Settlement: What It Is and What It Does [privately published, Murray Brothers Press, 1913]
112. Ida B. Wells-Barnett A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the US, 1892-1893-1894 [Donohue & Henneberry, 1895]
113. Alice Hamilton 'Journey and Impressions of Congress' and 'At the War Capitals' Women at the Hague [Macmillan, 1915]
114. Emily Greene Blach and Mercedes M. Randall Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Appendix in Peace and Bread in Time of War [Macmillan, 1922]
115. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Bonnin The Warlike Seven Old Indian Legends [Ginn & Company, 1902]
116. Mary Austin Sex Emancipation through War, Forum 59 [1918]
117. Caroline Bartlett Crane What Every Woman Wants Everyman's House [Doubleday, Page & Company, 1925]


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Contents:
Volume I: Suffrage
Edited and Introduced by Janet Beer
Janet Beer Introduction: The Woman Suffrage Movement in America - 1848-1920
1. The First Convention: Seneca Falls, including the Declaration of Sentiments [1848]
2. Lucretia Mott Discourse on Woman, Philadelphia [T.B. Peterson, 1850]
3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Worcester [1850] and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse [1852] Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852]
4. Matilda Gage to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse, Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852]
5. Theodore Parker A Sermon of the Public Function of Women, Women's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1853]
6. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper The Colored People in America, from The Colored People in America: Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects Philadelphia [1857]
7. Sojourner Truth Address to the American Equal Rights Association [1867]
8. Hamilton Wilcox Women are Voters! New York Suffrage Law [John W. Lovell Co., 1885]
9. Angelina French Newman Woman Suffrage in Utah [Government Print Office, 1886]
10. Henry Blair Woman Suffrage Speech to the Senate [1886]
11. Clara Benwick Colby The Ballot and the Bullet Theory The Woman's Tribune [Editor, 1883-86]
12. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Unsolved Problems in Woman Suffrage, reprinted from The Forum [Forum Publishing Company, 1887]
13. F.G. Adams The Women's Vote in Kansas [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1888]
14. Olympia Brown Woman's Suffrage a Political Necessity, abstract of address before the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, [January 28, 1889]
15. Lucy Stone Questions for Remonstrants [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
16. Olive Schreiner Three Dreams in a Desert [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
17. Various Authors, The Elective Franchise [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
18. Ednah D. Cheney Municipal Suffrage for Women [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889]
19. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Straight Lines or Oblique Lines? [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1893]
20. Henry Blackwell Objections to Woman Suffrage Answered [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1896]
21. Katherine A.G. Patterson, Helen G. Ecob et al Colorado Speaks for Herself [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1897]
22. Carrie Chapman Catt, Florence Kelley and Evelyn W. Ordway How the Women of New Orleans Discovered their Wish to Vote [Political Science Study Series, Vol. V. No. 4, 1900]
23. William M. Salter What is the Real Emancipation of Woman? [Woman Suffrage Association, 1902]
24. Marion B. Schlesinger, Mary A.E.M. Buckminster, and Mary Leavens Arguments in Favour of Woman Suffrage [Committee of the College Equal Suffrage Law, 1905]
25. Ida Husted Harper Suffrage a Right [North American Review Publishing Co., 1906]
26. Ida Husted Harper History of the Movement for Women Suffrage [Interurban Woman Suffrage Council, 1907]
27. Martha Carey Thomas New Fashioned Argument for Woman Suffrage [National American Women Suffrage Association, 1908]
28. Julia Ward Howe Woman and the Suffrage The Outlook [1909]
29. Max Eastman Woman's Suffrage and Sentiment [The Equal Franchise Society, 1909]
30. Lucia Ames Mead What Women Might Do with the Ballot [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1910]
31. Amelia MacDonald Cutler Six Reasons Why Farmers' Wives Should Vote [National American Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc., circa 1910]
32. The Truth versus Richard Barry [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1911]
33. Equal Suffrage Meeting [Frank Facey, 1911]
34. Women in the Home [California Equal Suffrage Association, circa 1911]
35. Ida Husted Harper How Six States Won Woman Suffrage [National American Woman's Suffrage Association, 1912]
36. Theodore Roosevelt Speech on Suffrage [Allied Printing, 1912]
37. Ella S. Stewart The Ballot for the Women of the Farm [Chicago, 1913]
38. Official Program, Woman Suffrage Procession [1913]
39. George Creel What Have Women Done with the Vote? [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1915]
40. Alice Stone Blackwell Jane Addams Testifies Woman's Journal [1915]
41. Alice Stone Blackwell Woman Suffrage [1915]
42. Edith Abbot Are Women a Force for Good Government? National Municipal Review Vo. IV, No.3 July [1915]
43. Mary Beard and Florence Kelley Why Women Demand a Federal Suffrage Amendment [Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, 1916]
44. Mrs. Guilford Dudley The Negro Votes in the South [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1918]
45. Carrie Chapman Catt An Address to the Legislatures of the United States [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., 1919]
Volume II: Work and Education
Edited and introduced by Anne-Marie Ford
Anne-Marie Ford Introduction: The Woman's Place
Part 1: Education
46. C.D.B Colby Concerning Farmers' Wives [New England Publishing Company, 1880]
47. Maria Mitchell The Collegiate Education of Girls [New England Publishing Company, 1881]
48. Kate Morris Cone The Gifts of Women to Educational Institutions [Association of Collegiate Alumnae, 1884]
49. Kate Holladay Claghorn The Problem of Occupation for College Women Educational Review March 1898, pp. 217-230
50. Sui Sin Far and Edith Maude Eaton Its Wavering Image Mrs. Spring Fragrance [1912]
51. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Simmons Bonnin 'The Ground Squirrel' and 'The Big Red Apples' from 'Impressions of an Indian Childhood', Atlantic Monthly [1900]
52. Francis Squire Potter Education and Democracy [College Equal Suffrage League, July 1909]
Part 2: Women's Work
53. Caroline Dall The Opening at the Gates The College, the Market and the Court, or Women's Relations to Education, Labor and Law [Boston, Lee and Shepherd, 1867]
54. May Wright Sewall A Report on the Position of Women in Industry and Education in the State of Indiana [Indiana Department of the New Orleans Exposition, 1885]
55. Agnes Nestor The Working Girl's Need of Suffrage [Literature of the Mississippi Valley Suffrage Conference, circa 1910]
56. Wages of Women in the Corset Factories in Massachusetts [Minimum Wage Commission, 1914.]
57. Maggie Hinchey Senators vs. Working Women [Wage Earners' Suffrage League, circa 1918.]
Part 3: The Rights and Wrongs of Women
58. Great Auction Sale of Slaves at Savannah, Georgia Tribune, March 1859, [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1859]
59. Southern Proofs of the 'Chivalrous and High-Minded Character' produced by slavery [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860]
60. Southern Proofs that Slavery is a 'Parental Relation' [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860]
Part 4: Angels of Mercy
61. Seventh Report of the Ladies' Aid Society of Philadelphia [1865]
62. C.E. Hopkins and E.C. Hobson A Report Concerning The Coloured Women of the South [Trustees of the John F. Slater Fund, 1896]
63. Anna Julia Cooper The Status of Woman in America A Voice from the South [The Aldine Printing House, 1892, pp.127-145]
64. N. Mosell, The Work of the Afro-American Woman, [G.S. Ferguson, 1894, reprinted 1908.]
65. Elise Johnson McDougald The Task of Negro Womanhood [The New Negro, ed. Alain Locke.]
66. The Fadettes Woman's Orchestra of Boston Boston Evening Transcript [14 August 1906]
67. Women's National Agricultural and Horticultural Association, May 1914
68. Edith Wharton 'Reverence' and 'The New Frenchwoman,' French Ways and Their Meaning New York and London [D. Appleton, 1919.]
Volume III: Health, Birth-Control and Prostitution
Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin
Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Female Body
69. Victoria Woodhull The Elixir of Life, or Why do We Die? [Woodhull and Clafin, 1873]
70. Mary Putman Jacobi A Question of Rest for Women During Menstruation [1877]
71. John Noyes Male Continence The Oneida Community [Office of the American Socialist, 1877]
72. Dr Elizabeth Blackwell The Human Element in Sex [J.&A. Churchill, 1894]
73. Maria E. Ward Bicycling for Ladies [Brentano's, 1896]
74. Police Records of Prostitution from 1907-1908 in The Records of the Enforcement of the Laws of Prostitution
75. Helen Keller The Modern Woman Metropolitan Magazine, 1912 [Congressional Record, September 17, 1913]
76. Dr. Anna Blount The Woman Voter and the Eugenic Ideal (c.1915) [Research Publications, Inc., 1977]
77. Dr. Marie Carmichael Stopes The Problem of Unrest SNE, volume 31
78. Margaret Sanger Family Limitation [Fifth Edition, 1916]
79. S. Adolphus Knopf Birth Control [A.R. Elliott Publishing Company, 1916]
80. Katharine Bushnell Plain Words to Plain People
81. Virginia Brooks Eliminating Vice from the Small City [Chicago]
82. M.P. Dowling, Paul L. Blakely and Austin O'Malley Race, Suicide, Birth Control [New York Press]
83. Florence Kelley and Alzina Stevens Wage Earning Children in Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895]
84. Caroline Hedger, M.D. The School Children of the Stockyards District, Reprinted from the Transactions of the Fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography, held at Washington D.D., September 23-28, 1912, [Washington Government Printing Office, 1913]
85. The Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor in Collaboration with the Women's Education and Industrial Union of Boston, 'Household Expenses,' [Wright and Potter Printing Company, 1900]
86. Jane Addams Increased Social Control in a New Conscience and an Ancient Evil [Macmillan, 1912]
87. Emma Goldman The Traffic in Women (1911), Red Emma Speaks edited by Alix Kates Shulman, [Random House, 1972]
88. Frances E. Willard The Beautiful in How to Win: A Book for Girls [Funk & Wagnalls, 1886]
89. Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women and Social Service, Address before the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government [November 14, 1907]
90. Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Emmeline Pethick Lawrence Does a Man Support his Wife? And Who Supports the Children? [National American Woman Suffrage Association]
Volume IV: Women's Clubs and Settlements
Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin
Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Gathering of Women
91. Mrs. Percy Pennybacker The Eighth Biennial Convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, No. 519 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
92. Sarah S. Platt Decker The Meaning of the Women's Club Movement, No. 513, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
93. Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman The Women's Clubs in the Middle-Western States, No.515 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
94. Mary Alden Ward The Influence of Women's Clubs in New England, and in the Middle-Eastern States, No. 514 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
95. 'Clara de Hirsche Home for Working Girls,' Pamphlet, [Keystone Printery New York, 1905]
96. Elizabeth Lindsay David Chapters 1 and 2 from The Story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs [Pamphlet, 1922]
97. Dorothea Moore The Work of Women's Clubs in California, No. 517, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
98. Mrs A.O Granger The Effect of Club Work in the South, No. 516 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906]
99. Frances E. Willard The Ballot for the Home, Equal Suffrage Leaflet, Volume VII, Number 2 [March 1898]
100. Eliza Daniel Stewart Memories of the Crusade: A Thrilling Account of the Great Uprising of the Women of Ohio in 1873, Against the Liquor Crime [Columbus: Wm. G. Hubbard and Co., 1888]
101. Alice Stone Blackwell Suffrage and Temperance [Woman Suffrage Association and the Woman's Journal, circa 1912]
102. Elizabeth Tilton Is Beer the Cure for the Drink Evil? The Survey February 24, [1917]
103. Jane Addams Hull House: A Social Settlement at 335 South Halstead Street [Privately Published, 1894]
104. Jane Addams The Subjective Value of Social Settlements Philanthropy and Social Progress [Thomas Y. Crowell & Company, 1893]
105. South End House: Its 18th Year of Cumulative Progress [March 1910]
106. Ellen Gates Starr Art and Labor Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895]
107. Florence Mabel Dedrick Our Sister or the Streets Fighting the Traffic in Young Girls or War on the White Slave Trade [G.S. Ball, 1910]
108. Lillian D. Wald Organizations within the Settlements in The House on Henry Street [Rinehart and Winston, 1915]
109. Jane Addams Women's Memories - Reacting on Life as Illustrated by the Story of the Devil Baby The Long Road of Woman's Memory [Macmillan, 1916]
110. Mary Antin The Law of the Fathers They Who Knock at Our Gates [Houghton Mifflin, 1914]
111. Anna Julia Cooper The Social Settlement: What It Is and What It Does [privately published, Murray Brothers Press, 1913]
112. Ida B. Wells-Barnett A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the US, 1892-1893-1894 [Donohue & Henneberry, 1895]
113. Alice Hamilton 'Journey and Impressions of Congress' and 'At the War Capitals' Women at the Hague [Macmillan, 1915]
114. Emily Greene Blach and Mercedes M. Randall Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Appendix in Peace and Bread in Time of War [Macmillan, 1922]
115. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Bonnin The Warlike Seven Old Indian Legends [Ginn & Company, 1902]
116. Mary Austin Sex Emancipation through War, Forum 59 [1918]
117. Caroline Bartlett Crane What Every Woman Wants Everyman's House [Doubleday, Page & Company, 1925]

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Routledge

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Series

History of Feminism

Release date

November 2002

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

2003

Editors

, ,

Dimensions

216 x 138 x 43mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

1600

ISBN-13

978-0-415-21945-7

Barcode

9780415219457

Categories

LSN

0-415-21945-0



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