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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Women's suffrage has historically been a long, slow and arduous process worldwide; Canada's movement shares many of the common denominators with other global communities where women's quest for the right to vote ultimately became a watershed moment in the timeline of gender parity. Agnes Campbell Macphail is the name most readily associated with the fight for women's voting rights and the first inkling of feminist ideals in Canada. Her leadership spawned a movement that gathered speed as its membership grew and the principles of a more equitable Canadian nation began to take hold. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCwmncan.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
became a watershed moment in the timeline of gender parity. Agnes Campbell Macphail is the name most readily associated with the fight for womens voting rights and the first
inkling of feminist ideals in Canada. Her leadership spawned a movement that gathered speed as its membership grew and the principles of a more equitable Canadian nation began to
take hold. For 50 years before the outbreak of the First World War women had been campaigning to gain the right to vote...It seemed unjust to many women and
to some men that women had no say in who was elected to Parliament. For most of this period peaceful and legal means were used to try to win
over public opinion and gain the support of politicians (Cosson, 2003, p. 5). Canadian women gained the right to vote in 1916 (Cassel, 2003; Historical Society of Alberta, 2005)
after a forthright struggle to overcome adversity inherent to such a hotly debated issue, yet they did not stop justifying its passage for years afterward. The chatter that continued
long after the enactment took place was perpetuated by many prominent and not so major players reiterated who argued how the idea of women voting was by no means in
the best interest of the country at large and the family unit in particular. Clearly, at the foundation of such naysaying attitudes was the palpable fear that women would
actually sway the outcome of a particular election and inevitably take control of Canadas sociopolitical character away from the men. Rev. R. L. Ballantyne was as good an example
as any when looking for the derogatory attitudes that permeated much of the male population (there were a handful who stood in support for womens rights). Claiming Canadian women
...