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This 3 page paper provides a historical reference for the movement. Changing aspects in the world--the Industrial Revolution, the publication of the Communist Manifesto--are taken into consideration. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA829suf.rtf
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of art on the horizon and political paradigms were being questioned. At the time, feminism was just beginning to emerge. Enlightenment feminists would argue that there is no difference
between the sexes at all (Bannet, 2000). Yet, there were different ideas to emerge from the period. During the 1800s, it became increasingly important in America that women would be
allowed to vote and this issue was at the heart of the movement. In fact, since the women began to protest for rights in the context of feminism, voting had
been considered to be the center of their aspirations (DuBois, 1999). The start of the suffrage movement in the United States is sometimes attributable to Abigail Adams. This first
lady wrote to her husband stating that he should remember the women too (Adams, 2003). The first time that feminists officially met in the context of womens suffrage was at
the Womens Anti-Slavery Society of Philadelphia during 1837 (Adams, 2003). The women did not contain their remarks to the members of that group however. In 1840, some delegates attended the
World Anti-Slavery movement but the women were not taken seriously and not allowed to participate (Adams, 2003). It was there that Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, the president to
the Anti-Slavery society, would first become acquainted (Adams, 2003). Stanton also worked along with Susan B. Anthony and during the middle of the nineteenth century. Stanton would try help
primarily in respect to higher education and legal identity (Adams, 2003). These issues are somewhat related to voting. Obviously, a vote only has meaning if the people know what they
are voting for. The women had to be educated. Stanton became the president of the National Woman Suffrage Association and served between 1869 and 1890 (Adams, 2003). From this movement
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