Introduction to the history of Women's Suffrage, An
£7.99
37 Available
ISBN
9781913724641
Introduction to the history of Women's Suffrage, An is available to buy in increments of 1
In 1881, three writers and rights activists, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Matilda Joslyn Gage, came together to publish the first volume in their groundbreaking History of Woman Suffrage series – a series that eventually went on to fill 5700 pages and lend weight to a movement that changed the course of history for ever. Taking its dedication from the first volume of the History – to the memory of pioneering women whose ‘earnest lives and fearless words… have been, in the preparation of these pages, a constant inspiration’ – this volume collects together four essays that give an insight into the work as a whole, and provide a rounded introduction to the history of women’s suffrage on both sides of the Atlantic.
Weight | 0.170000 |
---|---|
ISBN13/Barcode | 9781913724641 |
ISBN10 | 1913724646 |
Author | Susan B Anthony with Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Matilda Gage |
Binding | Paperback |
---|---|
Date Published | 19th December 2021 |
Pages | 158 |
Publisher | Renard Press |
In 1881, three writers and rights activists, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Matilda Joslyn Gage, came together to publish the first volume in their groundbreaking History of Woman Suffrage series – a series that eventually went on to fill 5700 pages and lend weight to a movement that changed the course of history for ever.
Taking its dedication from the first volume of the History – to the memory of pioneering women whose ‘earnest lives and fearless words… have been, in the preparation of these pages, a constant inspiration’ – this volume collects together four essays that give an insight into the work as a whole, and provide a rounded introduction to the history of women’s suffrage on both sides of the Atlantic.
'An indispensable source.' — Lisa Tetrault
'There is nothing in the annals of American reform quite like History of Woman Suffrage.' — Ellen Carol DuBois