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Revolutionary Backlash: Women And Politics In The Early American Republic

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Original price was: $25.05.Current price is: $15.03.

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gtin13 : 9780812220735
Language : English
Book Title : Revolutionary Backlash: Women And Politics In The Early Amer...
Author : Rosemarie Zagarri
Publication Name : Revolutionary Backlash : Women and Politics in the Early American Republic
Item Height : 0.7 in
Number of Pages : 248 Pages
Subject : Feminism & Feminist Theory, United States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), Women in Politics
Subject Area : Political Science, Social Science, History
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Format : Trade Paperback
Publication Year : 2008
ISBN : 9780812220735
Item Weight : 12.8 Oz
Item Length : 9 in
Type : Textbook
Series : Early American Studies
Item Width : 6 in

Please refer to the section BELOW (and NOT ABOVE ) this line for the product details – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Title: Revolutionary Backlash: Women And Politics In The Early American Republic ISBN13: 9780812220735 ISBN10: 0812220730 Author: Zagarri, Rosemarie (Author) Description: The Seneca Falls Convention Is Typically Seen As The Beginning Of The First Women’s Rights Movement In The United States Revolutionary Backlash Argues Otherwise According To Rosemarie Zagarri, The Debate Over Women’s Rights Began Not In The Decades Prior To 1848 But During The American Revolution Itself Integrating The Approaches Of Women’s Historians And Political Historians, This Book Explores Changes In Women’s Status That Occurred From The Time Of The American Revolution Until The Election Of Andrew Jackson Although The Period After The Revolution Produced No Collective Movement For Women’s Rights, Women Built On Precedents Established During The Revolution And Gained An Informal Foothold In Party Politics And Male Electoral Activities Federalists And Jeffersonians Vied For Women’s Allegiance And Sought Their Support In Times Of National Crisis Women, In Turn, Attended Rallies, Organized Political Activities, And Voiced Their Opinions On The Issues Of The Day After The Publication Of Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication Of The Rights Of Woman, A Widespread Debate About The Nature Of Women’s Rights Ensued The State Of New Jersey Attempted A Bold Experiment: For A Brief Time, Women There Voted On The Same Terms As Men Yet As Rosemarie Zagarri Argues In Revolutionary Backlash, This Opening For Women Soon Closed By 1828, Women’s Politicization Was Seen More As A Liability Than As A Strength, Contributing To A Divisive Political Climate That Repeatedly Brought The Country To The Brink Of Civil War The Increasing Sophistication Of Party Organizations And Triumph Of Universal Suffrage For White Males Marginalized Those Who Could Not Vote, Especially Women Yet All Was Not Lost Women Had Already Begun To Participate In Charitable Movements, Benevolent Societies, And Social Reform Organizations Through These Organizations, Women Found Another Way To Practice Politics Binding: Paperback, Paperback Publisher: UNIV OF PENNSYLVANIA PR Publication Date: 2008-12-09 Weight: 0.82 lbs Dimensions: 0.6” H x 9” L x 6” W Number of Pages: 233 Language: English