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“Cupid and Chow-Chow” (1872)

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Chronology of the U.S.Woman Suffrage Campaign xi
  5. Introduction 1
  6. PART I. Declaring Sentiments, 1846–1891
  7. Introduction 10
  8. “Petition for Woman’s Rights” (1846) 18
  9. “Declaration of Sentiments” (1848) 20
  10. Speech at Akron, Ohio,Woman’s Rights Convention (1851) 24
  11. Christine, or, Woman’s Trials and Triumphs (1856) 26
  12. “Independence” (1859) “Shall Women Vote?” (1860) 41
  13. “Woman and the Ballot” (1870) 43
  14. “Aunt Chloe’s Politics” (1871) “John and Jacob—A Dialogue on Woman’s Rights” (1885) 47
  15. My Wife and I; or, Harry Henderson’s History (1871) 51
  16. “Cupid and Chow-Chow” (1872) 62
  17. “Trotty’s Lecture Bureau” (1877) 74
  18. “How I went to ’lection” (1877) 77
  19. Fettered for Life, or, Lord and Master (1874) “A Divided Republic: An Allegory of the Future” (1885) 86
  20. “Another Chapter of ‘The Bostonians’” (1887) 100
  21. Wynema: A Child of the Forest (1891) 108
  22. PART II. Searching for Sisterhood: Two Case Studies of Transnational Feminism, 1907–1914
  23. Introduction 114
  24. Interactions between U.S. and British Campaigns
  25. Votes for Women (1907) 120
  26. “The March of the Women” (1911) 133
  27. “The Diary of a Newsy” (1911) 135
  28. Julia France and Her Times (1912) 138
  29. “How it Feels to be Forcibly Fed” (1914) 148
  30. Interactions between U.S. and Chinese Campaigns
  31. “The Inferior Woman” (1910) 153
  32. “The Oppression of Women” (1915) “In All Earnestness, I speak to all my sisters” (1915) 163
  33. “Catching Up with China” Banner (1912) 165
  34. “Heathen Chinee” Cartoon (1912) 167
  35. PART III. Making Woman New! 1897–1920
  36. Introduction 170
  37. “Women Do Not Want It” (1897) “The Anti-Suffragists” (1898) “The Socialist and the Suffragist” (1911) Charlotte Perkins Gilman 177
  38. “The Australian Ballot System” (1898) 182
  39. Portia Politics (1911–1912) 186
  40. “Disfranchisement” from Mother Goose as a Suffragette (1912) “Taffy” from Mother Goose as a Suffragette (1912) 190
  41. “Women March” (1912) 193
  42. “The Arrest of Suffrage” (1912) 200
  43. “Brother Baptis’ on Woman Suffrage” (1912) 206
  44. “Mirandy on ‘Why Women Can’t Vote’” (1912) 207
  45. Hagar (1913) 211
  46. “The Parade: A Suffrage Playlet in One Act and an After-Act” (1913) 220
  47. “The Woman with Empty Hands: The Evolution of a Suffragette” (1913) 225
  48. “How it Feels to be the Husband of a Suffragette” (1914) 231
  49. “Our Own Twelve Anti-Suffragist Reasons” (1914) “Representation” (1914) “The Revolt of Mother” (1915) “A Consistent Anti to Her Son” (1915) 235
  50. “A Plea for Suffrage” (1915) 239
  51. “The President’s Valentine” (1916) 241
  52. Fanny Herself (1917) 243
  53. The Sturdy Oak, chapter 7 (1917) 254
  54. For Rent—One Pedestal (1917) 263
  55. “President Wilson says ‘Godspeed to the Cause’” Cartoon (1917) “Come to Mother” Cartoon (1917) 270
  56. “President Wilson’s War Message” Banner (1917) 273
  57. “Telling the Truth at the White House” (1917) 275
  58. “We Worried Woody Wood” (1917) 280
  59. “Prison Notes, Smuggled to Friends from the District Jail” (1917) 282
  60. “Switchboard Suffrage” (1920) 284
  61. PART IV. Carrying the Suffrage Torch, 1920–1946
  62. Introduction 290
  63. Jailed For Freedom (1920) 294
  64. “Upon this marble bust that is not I” (1923) 298
  65. “The Suffrage Torch: Memories of a Militant” (1929) 300
  66. The Mother of Us All (1946) 306
  67. Notes 311
  68. Selected Bibliography of U.S. Suffrage Literature 321
  69. Index 325
  70. ABOUT THE EDITORS 335
Treacherous Texts
This chapter is in the book Treacherous Texts
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