영문목차
Contents
Acknowledgments ix
1 Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Multiple Traditions 1
2 Seneca Falls and Beyond: Attacking the Cult of Domesticity with Equality and Inalienable Rights 39
3 The 1850s: Married Women's Property Rights, Divorce, and Temperance 70
4 Gatherings of Unsexed Women: Separate Spheres and Women's Rights 93
5 The Civil War Years: Breaking Down Boundaries Between Public and Private 113
6 The Postwar Years: Reconstruction and Positivism 128
7 The Postwar Years: The New Departure, the Alliance with Labor, and the Critique of Marriage 157
8 Not the Word of God But the Work of Men: Cady Stanton's Critique of Religion 178
9 "In the Long Weary March, Each One Walks Alone": Evolution and Anglo-Saxonism at Century's End 196
10 Multiple Feminisms and Multiple Traditions: Elizabeth Cady Stanton in American Political Thought 219
Notes 227
Bibliography 271
Index 281
About the Author 299