Consistent Democracy offers an intellectual history of democracy and the so-called woman question from the 1830s through the 1890s. It shows that in asking and answering questions about women's roles, responsibilities, and rights, Americans grappled with fundamental ideas about democracy.
Consistent Democracy offers an intellectual history of democracy and the so-called woman question from the 1830s through the 1890s. It shows that in asking and answering questions about women's roles, responsibilities, and rights, Americans grappled with fundamental ideas about democracy.
Leslie Butler is Associate Professor of History at Dartmouth College and the author of Critical Americans: Victorian Intellectuals and Transatlantic Liberal Reform.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Introduction Prelude: Posing the Woman Question in 1838 Part I: American Democracy, American Women Chapter 1: Observing American Democracy Chapter 2: Domesticating Democracy Chapter 3: To Make Democracy Consistent Interlude: Self-Government on Trial in 1863 Part II: Woman Questions, Democracy Questions Chapter 4: Amending Democracy Chapter 5: Reconstructing the Woman Question Chapter 6: Unresolved Questions Epilogue: New Women, New Questions in 1893 Notes Index
Acknowledgments Introduction Prelude: Posing the Woman Question in 1838 Part I: American Democracy, American Women Chapter 1: Observing American Democracy Chapter 2: Domesticating Democracy Chapter 3: To Make Democracy Consistent Interlude: Self-Government on Trial in 1863 Part II: Woman Questions, Democracy Questions Chapter 4: Amending Democracy Chapter 5: Reconstructing the Woman Question Chapter 6: Unresolved Questions Epilogue: New Women, New Questions in 1893 Notes Index
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