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9780313256509

Man Cannot Speak for Her

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780313256509

  • ISBN10:

    0313256500

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1989-11-01
  • Publisher: Praeger Pub Text
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Summary

Laura Kaplan Shanley is dedicated to the belief that autonomous, unassisted birth is a concept whose time has come and should be re-introduced into human society as the ideal form of safe, joyous, and healthy childbirth.

Author Biography

KARLYN KOHRS CAMPBELL is Professor of Speech-Communication at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis.

Table of Contents

Introduction<BR>
Maria W. Miller Stewart, Lecture Delivered at the Franklin Hall, 1832<BR>
Address, Convention of Anti-Slavery Women, 1838<BR>
Angelina Grimke [Weld], Address at Pennsylvania Hall, 1838<BR>
Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, 1848<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Speech at the Seneca Falls Convention, 1848<BR>
Lucretia Coffin Mott, "Discourse on Woman," 1849<BR>
Sojourner Truth, Speech at the Woman's Rights Convention, Akron, Ohio, 1851<BR>
Ernestine Potowski Rose, Speech at the National Woman's Rights Convention, Worcester, MA, 1851<BR>
Clarina Howard Nichols, "The Responsibilities of Woman," Second National Woman's Rights Convention, Worcester, MA, 1851<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Address to the Legislature of New York, 1854<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "A Slave's Appeal," Speech to the Judiciary Committee, New York State Legislature, 1860<BR>
National Woman's Rights Convention Debate, New York City, 1860<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "On Divorce," Speech before the Judiciary Committee of the New York Senate, 1861<BR>
Sojourner Truth, Two Speeches at the American Equal Rights Association Convention, 1867<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Kansas State Referendum Campaign Speech at Lawrence, Kansas, 1867<BR>
Susan B. Anthony, "Is it a Crime for a U.S. Citizen to Vote?" 1872-73<BR>
Frances E. Willard, A White Life for Two, 1890<BR>
Matilda Joslyn Gage, "The Dangers of the Hour," Women's National Liberal Convention, 1890<BR>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "The Solitude of Self," 1892<BR>
Ida B. Wells, "Southern Horrors, Lynch Law in All its Phases," 1892, with Mary Church Terrell's, Introduction, 1893<BR>
Mary Church Terrell, "What It Means to be Colored in the Capital of the United States," 1906<BR>
Anna Howard Shaw, "The Fundamental Principle of a Republic," 1915<BR>
Carrie Chapman Catt, Presidential Address, 1902<BR>
Carrie Chapman Catt, "The Crisis," Atlantic City, NJ, 1916<BR>
Carrie Chapman Catt, "Address to the United States Congress," 1917<BR>
Crystal Eastman, "Now We Can Begin," 1920<BR>
Index

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