Women's Rights and Transatlantic Antislavery in the Era of EmancipationKathryn Kish Sklar, James Brewer Stewart Yale University Press, 01.01.2007 - 385 Seiten Robert Dahl, one of the world's most influential and respected political scientists, has spent a lifetime exploring the institutions and practices of democracy in such landmark books as Who Governs?, On Democracy, and How Democratic Is the American Constitution? Here, Dahl looks at the fundamental issue of equality and how and why governments have fallen short of their democratic ideals. At the centre of the book is the question of whether the goal of political equality is so far beyond our human limits that it should be abandoned in favour of more attainable ends, or if there are ways to realistically address and reduce inequities. Though complete equality is unattainable, Dahl argues that strides toward that ideal are both desirable and feasible. He shows the remarkable shift in recent centuries toward democracy and political equality the world over. He explores the growth of democratic institutions, the expansion of citizenship, and the various obstacles that stand in the way of gains in political equality. Dahl also looks at the motives, particularly those of emotion and reason, that play such a crucial role in the struggle for equality. In conclusion, Dahl assesses the contemporary political landscape in the United States. He looks at the likelihood of political inequality increasing, and poses one scenario in which Americans grow more unequal in their influence over their government. The counter scenario foresees a cultural shift in which citizens, rejecting what Dahl calls 'competitive consumerism', invest time and energy in civic action and work to reduce the inequality that now exists among Americans. |
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Seite xxi
... male examples evolved quickly into training grounds for a generation of African - American women essayists , orators , and news- paper publishers . " Friendship books " that circulated hand - to - hand through surprisingly extensive ...
... male examples evolved quickly into training grounds for a generation of African - American women essayists , orators , and news- paper publishers . " Friendship books " that circulated hand - to - hand through surprisingly extensive ...
Seite 3
... male rebels , even argued that " the oppression of women is the cause of all the rest of the oppression in the world . ” There may well be some ancient historical basis for this linkage between the oppression of women and human slavery ...
... male rebels , even argued that " the oppression of women is the cause of all the rest of the oppression in the world . ” There may well be some ancient historical basis for this linkage between the oppression of women and human slavery ...
Seite 4
... male prisoners - of - war were traditionally killed , since they were too dan- gerous to control , while women were enslaved , often dishonored by rape , and brought into tribal societies . Women were thus the archetypal slaves , and as ...
... male prisoners - of - war were traditionally killed , since they were too dan- gerous to control , while women were enslaved , often dishonored by rape , and brought into tribal societies . Women were thus the archetypal slaves , and as ...
Seite 5
... males and preceded any meaning- ful antislavery activities by one or more centuries . When seventeenth - century French and English writers thought of true slavery , they almost always had in mind the hundreds of thousands of European ...
... males and preceded any meaning- ful antislavery activities by one or more centuries . When seventeenth - century French and English writers thought of true slavery , they almost always had in mind the hundreds of thousands of European ...
Seite 11
... male rule in the 1848 Seneca Falls Declara- tion of Sentiments , drafted at the first convention in history devoted to wom- en's rights . We can only sample some of these charges , which , unlike Jeffer- son's list , challenge some of ...
... male rule in the 1848 Seneca Falls Declara- tion of Sentiments , drafted at the first convention in history devoted to wom- en's rights . We can only sample some of these charges , which , unlike Jeffer- son's list , challenge some of ...
Inhalt
55 | |
The Transatlantic Activism of AfricanAmerican Women Abolitionists | 141 |
Transatlantic Influences on the Emergence of Womens Rights in the United States | 209 |
Transcultural Activism Against Slavery by AfricanAmerican Women | 297 |
List of Contributors | 367 |
Index | 369 |
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abolition abolitionism abolitionist activism activists African American African-American women American women Amy Post Angelina Grimké antebellum anti antislavery movement black women Boston Britain British women campaign CEDAW Civil Convention culture diary domestic emancipation England enslaved equality Female Anti-Slavery Society feminism feminist femmes France free blacks freedom French friendship album Garrison Garrisonian gender Grimké Sisters Harriet Harriet Jacobs Harriet Martineau History Human Rights Jacobs James Forten Jane Journal letter Liberator literary London Lucretia Mott male marriage Martineau Mary Ann Shadd Midgley moral Negro nineteenth century North Oberlin oppression organized participation petition Philadelphia political published Quaker race racial radical reform religious Remond Revolution revolutionary Rose Sarah Forten Sarah Parker Remond sexual Shadd Cary sketches Sklar slave slavery analogy social tion trafficking transatlantic United violence Watkins white women William Lloyd Garrison woman women abolitionists women of color women's rights writing wrote York