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Halifax Public Libraries
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Choice Review
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Jones, Martha S.
Subjects
Blacks -- United States -- Suffrage.
Women -- Suffrage -- United States -- History.
Women suffragists, Black -- History.
Women social reformers, Black -- History.
Browse Catalog
by author:
Jones, Martha S.
by title:
Vanguard : how black...
by call number:
324.62082 J78v
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Jones, Martha S.
Blacks -- United States -- Suffrage.
Women -- Suffrage -- United States -- History.
Women suffragists, Black -- History.
Women social reformers, Black -- History.
MARC Display
Vanguard : how
black
women
broke barriers, won the vote, and insisted on equality for all / Martha S. Jones.
by
Jones, Martha S.
Basic Books, 2020.
Call #:
324.62082 J78v
Subjects
Blacks
--
United States
--
Suffrage.
Women
--
Suffrage
--
United States
--
History
.
Women
suffragists
,
Black
--
History
.
Women
social reformers,
Black
--
History
.
ISBN:
9781541618619 (hc.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Description:
339 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Bibliography:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-324) and index.
Summary:
"According to conventional wisdom, American
women
's campaign for the vote began with the Seneca Falls convention of 1848 and ended with the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. The movement was led by storied figures such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. But this
women
's movement was an overwhelmingly white one, and it secured the constitutional right to vote for white
women
, not for all
women
. In Vanguard, acclaimed historian Martha Jones offers a sweeping
history
of
Women
,
Black
's political lives in America, recounting how they fought for, won, and used the right to the ballot and how they fought against both racism and sexism. From 1830s Boston to the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and beyond to Shirley Chisholm, Stacey Abrams, and Kamala Harris, Jones excavates the lives and work of
black
women
who, although in many cases
suffragists
, were never single-issue activists. She recounts the lives of Maria Stewart, the first American woman to speak about politics before a mixed audience of men and
women
African Methodist Episcopal preacher Jarena Lee Reconstruction-era advocate for female suffrage Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Boston abolitionist, religious leader, and
women
's club organizer Eliza Ann Gardner, and other hidden figures who were pioneers for both gender and racial equality. Revealing the ways
black
women
remained independent in their ideas and their organization, Jones shows how
black
women
were again and again the American vanguard of
women
's rights, setting the pace in the quest for justice and collective liberation. In the twenty-first century,
black
women
's power at the polls and in politics is evident. Vanguard reveals that this power is not at all new, but is instead the culmination of two centuries of dramatic struggle."--From publisher.
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