The Grounding of Modern Feminism

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$16.92 - $61.66
UPC:
9780300042283
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
9/10/1989
Author:
Nancy F. Cott
Language:
english
Edition:
Reprint

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Product Overview

The time has come to define feminism; it is no longer possible to ignore it. The Century Magazine, 1914

In this landmark addition to scholarship, Nancy F. Cott, author of The Bonds of Womanhood, offers a new interpretation of American feminism during the early decades of this centurya period traditionally viewed as on in which women won the right to vote and then lost interest in feminist issues. Cott argues instead that his period was a time of crisis and transition from the nineteenth-century woman movement to the beginning of modern feminism. Many of the issues that are central to women today, says Cott, were firmly articulated in the early decades of this century. For example, the problem of defining sexual equality so as to recognize sexual difference between men and women, the ambiguous potential of a movement seeking individual freedoms for women by mobilizing sex solidarity, and the tensions involved in attaining full expression in work and love are all enduring elements of feminism seized upon by women of the 1910s and 1920s.
First discussing how feminism was indebted to its predecessors, Cott shows that increasing heterogeneity and diverse loyalties among women in the early twentieth century contradicted the premise of the nineteenth-century cause of woman (the singular noun symbolizing the unity of the female sex). From this crisis emerged feminism, championing individual variability and refuting the premise that a singular woman existed.

Cott focuses on the suffrage-campaign milieu in which feminism arose, giving particular attention to the character and role of the National Womans Party from its militant suffrage days to its advocacy of the equal right amendment in the 1920s. Against prevailing interpretations of the decline of womens political activities after 1920, Cott counterposes the swelling numbers in womens voluntary associations and their political efforts. She also analyzes the pitfalls that awaited women who tried for effectiveness in the male-dominated political parties. She sets the controversy over the equal rights amendment in new context, discussing the full dimensions of the conflict as not merely over personalities, tactics, or class loyalties, but as a signal example of the modern problem of capturing sexual equality and sexual difference in law.

The book explores the irony-strewn path of women who as aspiring professionals and political actors attempted to put into practice the feminist intent to replace the abstraction woman with, instead, the human sex. This historythe story of women who first claimed the name feministsbuilds an essential bridge between the presuffrage period and today.

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