Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Success of the Women's Suffrage Movement. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper provides an overview of the feminist movement of the 1800s and the events that led up to giving women the right to vote. The passage of the nineteenth amendment is the focus of this paper that looks at nineteenth century feminist movements. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA31719.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
vote and is something that is seen as significant today. Unlike feminists who just wanted to be recognized as equal to men, those who founded the suffrage movement were
most interest in political progress. The suffrage movement in fact was integral to the general progressive program of social justice and political reform. Going back a hundred years
or so in America, Blatch found a stultifying suffrage movement which actually bored its devotees and alienated its opponents ("The feminism," 1998). It seemed that a lot of time was
spent with just a handful of women and the arguments were redundant (1998). However, from the network of women rose an inchoate milieu of young New Women who actually defined
themselves by the modernist term of "feminism" (1998). Feminism was actually considered to be imported from France and was then equated with youth, psychology, sex, financial independence, and self
(1998). However, elements of the marginalized nineteenth-century critique of marriage began to spring forth but this time it was with broader generational appeal; it was more interesting and expressed
female sexual desire for the first time (1998). Stanton, with Anthony close behind, cut her way through the defense of the status quo in order to embrace her own
intellectual redoubt ("The feminism," 1998). In the 1850s, the vote was really the only concern for many (1998). In searching for the pure liberal lineage for feminism, recent writers
have suggested that these early movements were resistant to changing private life (1998). Others say that nothing could be further from the truth (1998). In the 1850s, womens rights leaders
did in fact use the metaphor of bondage to argue that "disenfranchisement was inextricable from womens relegation to the home" (1998, p.PG). Unlike those involved in the suffrage movement, liberal
...