Women's rights -- United States -- History -- 19th century
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Label
Women's rights -- United States -- History -- 19th century
Name
Women's rights
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of17
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, an American life, Lori D. Ginzberg
- Not for ourselves alone, the story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony, a film by Ken Burns and Paul Barnes ; a production of Florentine Films and WETA ; directed by Ken Burns ; produced by Paul Barnes ; writer, Geoffrey C. Ward
- Revolutionary heart, the life of Clarina Nichols and the pioneering crusade for women's rights, Diane Eickhoff
- Abolitionism and issues of race and gender, edited with introductions by John R. McKivigan
- Fighting chance, the struggle over woman suffrage and Black suffrage in Reconstruction America, Faye E. Dudden
- The American life of Ernestine L. Rose, Carol A. Kolmerten
- The Grimké sisters from South Carolina, pioneers for women's rights and abolition, Gerda Lerner
- The Rabbi's atheist daughter, Ernestine Rose, international feminist pioneer, Bonnie S. Anderson
- The agitators, three friends who fought for abolition and women's rights, by Dorothy Wickenden
- Susan B. Anthony, a Perpetual Motion Films production ; presentation of Non Fiction Films, Inc. in association with A & E Network ; produced and directed by Monte Markham, Adam Friedman ; written by Lee Fulkerson and Jon Wesslen
- Not for ourselves alone, the story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony : an illustrated history, by Geoffrey C. Ward ; based on a documentary film by Ken Burns, written by Geoffrey C. Ward ; with a preface by Ken Burns ; introduction by Paul Barnes ; and contributions by Martha Saxton, Ann D. Gordon, Ellen Carol DuBois
- Lucretia Mott's heresy, abolition and women's rights in nineteenth-century America, Carol Faulkner
- Mrs. Stanton's Bible, Kathi Kern
- Not for ourselves alone, a Florentine Films production ; producer, Ken Burns, Paul Barnes ; writer, Geoffrey C. Ward ; director, Ken Burns
- The agitators, three friends who fought for abolition and women's rights, Dorothy Wickenden
- Angelina Grimké, rhetoric, identity, and the radical imagination, Stephen Howard Browne
- Imperfect union, how Jessie and John Frémont mapped the West, invented celebrity, and helped cause the Civil War, Steve Inskeep