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Through Women's Eyes, Volume 2 : An American History with Documents
Through Women's Eyes, Volume 2 : An American History with Documents
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Author(s): DuBois, Ellen
DuBois, Ellen Carol
ISBN No.: 9781319156275
Pages: 552
Year: 201809
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 90.99
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Preface for Instructors Contents Special Features Introduction for Students Chapter 6: Reconstructing Women''s Lives North and South, 1865-1900 Gender and the Postwar Constitutional Amendments Constitutionalizing Women''s Rights A New Departure for Woman Suffrage Women''s Lives in Southern Reconstruction and Redemption Black Women in the New South White Women in the New South Racial Conflict in Slavery''s Aftermath Reading into the Past: Mary Tape, What Right Have You? (1855) Female Wage Labor and the Triumph of Industrial Capitalism Women''s Occupations after the Civil War Who Were the Women Wage Earners? Responses to Working Women Class Conflict and Labor Organization Reading into the Past: Leonora Barry , Women in the Knights of Labor Women of the Leisured Classes New Sources of Wealth and Leisure The Woman''s Era The Woman''s Christian Temperance Union Consolidating the Gilded Age Women''s Movement Looking to the Future Reading into the Past: Harriot Stanton Blatch , Voluntary Motherhood Conclusion: Toward a New Womanhood Chapter Review PRIMARY SOURCES: Ida B. Wells, Race Woman Ida B. Wells with the Family of Thomas Moore (1892) Ida B. Wells, Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells (1970) PRIMARY SOURCES: The Woman Who Toils Mrs. John (Bessie) Van Vorst and Marie Van Vorst, The Woman Who Toils: Being the Experiences of Two Ladies as Factory Girls (1903) PRIMARY SOURCES: The Higher Education of Women in the Postbellum Years Women Students Modeling Senior Plugs, University of California (c. 1900) Class in Zoology, Wellesley College (1883-1884) Basketball Team, Wells College (1904) Class in American History, Hampton Institute (1899-1900) Science Class, Washington, D.C.


, Normal College (1899) Graduating Class, Medical College of Syracuse University (1876) PRIMARY SOURCES: The New Woman What We Are Coming To (1898) In a Twentieth Century Club (1895) Picturesque America (1900) The Scorcher (1897) Nellie Bly, on the Fly (1890) Women Bachelors in New York (1896) Notes Suggested References Chapter 7: Women in an Expanding Nation: Consolidation of the West, Mass Immigration, and the Crisis of the 1890s Consolidating the West Native Women in the West Colonial Settler Families in the West The Wild West Late Nineteenth-Century Immigration The Decision to Immigrate The Immigrant''s Journey Reception of the Immigrants Immigrant Daughters Immigrant Wives and Mothers Reading into the Past: Emma Goldman , Living My Life Century''s End: Challenges, Conflict, and Imperial Ventures Rural Protest, Populism, and the Battle for Woman Suffrage Class Conflict and the Pullman Strike of 1894 The Settlement House Movement Epilogue to the Crisis: The Spanish-American War of 1898 Reading into the Past: Clemencia Lopez , Women of the Philippines Conclusion: Nationhood and Womanhood on the Eve of a New Century Chapter Review PRIMARY SOURCES: Representing Native American Women in the Late Nineteenth Century Indian Sledge Journey (1875) Hopi Potter Nampeyo (1900) Pueblo Women Greet Tourists (1902) Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (1898) Angel DeCora, Grey Wolf''s Daughter (1899) Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins, Life Among the Piutes (1883) Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins, From Silver Slate (July 9, 1886) PRIMARY SOURCES: Jane Addams, Twenty Years at Hull House Twenty Years at Hull House (1910) PRIMARY SOURCES: Jacob Riis''s Photographs of Immigrant Girls and Women In the Home of an Italian Ragpicker: Jersey Street Knee Pants at Forty-Five Cents a Dozen -- A Ludlow Street Sweater''s Shop Police Station Lodgers: Women''s Lodging Room in the West 47th Street Station I Scrubs: Katie Who Keeps House on West 49th Street Notes Suggested References Chapter 8: Power and Politics: Women in the Progressive Era, 1900-1920 The Female Labor Force Continuity and Change for Women Wage Earners Organizing Women Workers: The Women''s Trade Union League The Rising of the Women The Female Dominion Public Housekeeping Maternalist Triumphs: Protective Labor Legislation and Mothers'' Pensions Maternalist Defeat: The Struggle to Ban Child Labor Progressive Women and Political Parties Outside the Dominion: Progressivism and Race Votes for Women A New Generation for Suffrage Diversity in the Woman Suffrage Movement Returning to the Constitution: The National Suffrage Movement The Emergence of Feminism The Feminist Program The Birth Control Movement Reading into the Past: Margaret Sanger , Woman and Birth Control The Great War, 1914-1918 Pacifist and Antiwar Women Preparedness and Patriotism The Great Migration Winning Woman Suffrage Reading into the Past: African American Women Write about the Great Migration Conclusion: New Conditions, New Challenges Chapter Review PRIMARY SOURCES: Black Women and Progressive-Era Reform Lugenia Burns Hope, The Neighborhood Union: Atlanta Georgia (c. 1908) Ida B. Wells-Barnett, The East St. Louis Massacre: The Greatest Outrage of the Century (1917) City Colored Women''s Clubs of Augusta, Georgia, Resolution on Lynching (1918) Nannie Burroughs, Black Women and the Suffrage (1915) Mary Church Terrell, A Colored Woman in a White World (1940) PRIMARY SOURCES: Parades, Picketing, and Power: Women in Public Space Girl Strikers, New York Evening Journal (November 10, 1909) Members of the Rochester, New York, Branch of the Garment Workers Union (1913) Suffragists Marching down Fifth Avenue, New York City (1913) Suffrage Parade down Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C. (March 1913) National Woman''s Party Picketers at the White House (1917) Protest against the East St. Louis Riots, New York City (1917) PRIMARY SOURCES: Uncle Sam Wants You: Women and World War I Posters Let''s End It -- Quick with Liberty Bonds It''s Up to You. Protect the Nation''s Honor.


Enlist Now. Gee!! I Wish I Were a Man. I''d Join the Navy. The Woman''s Land Army of America Training School For Every Fighter a Woman Worker. Y.W.C.A.


PRIMARY SOURCES: Modernizing Womanhood Edna Kenton Says Feminism Will Give Men More Fun, Women Greater Scope, Children Better Parents, Life More Charm (1914) Inez Milholland, The Changing Home (1913) Crystal Eastman, Birth Control in the Feminism Program (1918) Notes Suggested References Chapter 9: Change and Continuity: Women in Prosperity, Depression, and War, 1920-1945 Prosperity Decade: The 1920s The New Woman in Politics Women at Work The New Woman in the Home Depression Decade: The 1930s At Home in Hard Times Women and Work Women''s New Deal Reading into the Past: Mary McLeod Bethune , Letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1940) Reading into the Past: Genora Johnson Dollinger Recalls the Flint Strike 1936-37 General Motors Sit-down Strike (1937) Working for Victory: Women and War, 1941-1945 Women in the Military Working Women in Wartime War and Everyday Life Conclusion: The New Woman in Ideal and Reality Chapter Review PRIMARY SOURCES: Women''s Lobbying in the 1920s The Anti-Lynching Crusaders (1922) One Million Women are Working Like Trojans to Stop Lynching in the U.S.A. (1922) The Shame of America (1922) American Women Urged to Vote for State Protection of Motherhood (1920) The Spider Web Chart (1920s) Women Patriots Protest the Sheppard-Towner Act (1926) Organized Manufacturers vs. Organized Women (1925) PRIMARY SOURCES: Beauty Culture between the Wars Can you tell us her name? (1926) Irresistible (1938) You Were Never Lovelier (1942) Glorifying Our Womanhood (1925) Queen of Blues Singers (1923) PRIMARY SOURCES: Dorothea Lange Photographs Farm Women of the Great Depression Migrant Mother #1 (1936) Migrant Mother #3 (1936) Migrant Mother #5 (1936) Unemployed lumber worker goes with his wife to the bean harvest (1939) You don''t have to worriate so much and you''ve got time to raise sompin'' to eat (1938) Cotton Weighing near Brownsville, Texas (1936) Sign of the Times -- Depression -- Mended Stockings, Stenographer (1934) Feet of Negro Cotton Hoer near Clarksdale, Mississippi (1937) PRIMARY SOURCES: Voices of Rosie the Riveter The more women at work the sooner we win! (1943) Hortense Johnson, What My Job Means to Me (1943) Beatrice Morales, Oral Intervi.


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