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Women's Rights Emerges within the Antislavery Movement, 1830-1870 : A Brief History with Documents /
- Title:
- Women's Rights Emerges within the Antislavery Movement, 1830-1870 : A Brief History with Documents /
- Author:
- Sklar, Kathryn Kish, author.
- Format:
- Book
- Institution:
- Wentworth Institute of Technology
- Contents:
- Introduction: "Our Rights as Moral Beings" -- Women Emerge in Public Life as Writers and Speakers against Slavery and Racial Prejudice, 1831-1833 -- Women Claim and Debate the Right to Speak and Act against Slavery and Race Prejudice, July 1836 - May 1837 -- The Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women, 1837 -- The GrimkeĢ Sisters Redefine the Rights of Women as Antislavery Speakers, Massachusetts, Summer 1837 -- Some Contexts of the Sisters' Victory, 1837-1838 -- The Antislavery Movement Splits over the Women's Rights Question, 1837-1840 -- An Independent Women's Rights Movement is Born, 1840-1858 -- The Problematics of Race within the New Movement, 1850 -- Free Black Women become Public Speakers against Slavery and Racial Prejudice, 1850-1860 -- The Ne Movement Debates Questions of Race and Sex, 1866-1869 -- Appendixes: A Chronology of the Antislavery and Women's Rights Movement (1830-1870) -- Questions for Consideration.
- Online access:
- No online access
- Library holdings:
-
Wentworth Stacks--Upper Level
305.420973 .S55 2019
–
Unavailable