Combining documents with an interpretive essay, this book is the first to offer a much-needed guide to the emergence of the women’s rights movement within the anti-slavery activism of the 1830s. The introductory essay places a new focus on the relationship among campaigns against racial prejudice and the emergence of the women’s rights movement, tracing the cause of women’s rights from Angelina and Sarah Grimk#233;’s campaign against slavery and the emergence of race as a divisive issue that finally split that movement in 1869. A rich collection of nearly 60 documents-10 of them new-includes a range of voices, from free black women activists such as Francis Watkins Harper and Sarah Mapps Douglass, to Quaker abolitionists and their opponents. Document headnotes, maps and illustrations, a chronology, questions for consideration, a selected bibliography, and an index have been updated and enrich students’ understanding of this period.
Additional ISBNs: 9781319113124, 1319113125, 9781319169305, 1319169309


America Now, High School Edition: Short Readings from Recent Periodicals
Art & Visual Culture 1600-1850: Academy to Avant-Garde
Aging Well: Surprising Guideposts to a Happier Life from the Landmark Study of Adult Development
An Introduction to MultiAgent Systems
7 Ways to Transform the Lives of Wounded Students
Athenian Democracy: A Sourcebook
Brazil, 1964-1985: The Military Regimes of Latin America in the Cold War
Aquinas on Being, Goodness, and God
An Imam in Paris
A Wicked War
Contested Boundaries: A New Pacific Northwest History
Destiny of the Republic
A Different Mirror for Young People
America's History
Ancient Greece: A New History (First Edition)
Inner Engineering
Lincoln on Race and Slavery
A Flea in her Ear
Administrator's Guide to School-Community Relations, The
AM GOV 2019-2020 
Review Women’s Rights Emerges within the Anti-Slavery Movement
There are no reviews yet.