Women's Suffrage Movement Essay

1280 Words6 Pages

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Ryenn Seaney
Ailene Crum
HIST 2023
January 28, 2023

Women?s Suffrage Movement

?Feminism is a belief that although women and men are inherently of equal worth, most societies privilege men as a group. As a result, social movements are necessary to achieve political equality between women and men, with the understanding that gender always intersects with other social hierarchies.?-Estelle Freedman. Politics, traditionally, is a male-dominated profession within most societies around the world. For nearly a century, a global debate about women's rights and political participation has been taking place. The focal point of the women?s suffrage movement was predominantly to eradicate the discrimination against women in American society. After …show more content…

A Civil Rights activist in addition to being a Women's Suffrage activist, Stanton dared to challenge the foundational traditions of the constitution, and suggest that women are entitled to the right to vote. Once recognized as the most dangerous woman in America, she questioned the fundamental assumptions that the American society held about the roles men and women were to have in society. What began with a simple inquiry of why women are not permitted to vote, quickly overcame both Elizabeth Candy Stanton and women across the nation. She devoted her life to ensuring women generations later would not have to question this same thing for themselves. Elizabeth Stanton decided to organize a gathering to discuss women's civil, social, and religious rights. With the assistance of Lucretia Mott, a close friend, and fellow activist, Stanton led the first-ever convention in Seneca Falls in support of the Women?s Suffrage movement. Heroism was demonstrated by Elizabeth Cady Stanton's fervent support of women's rights. Throughout her life, Stanton's actions demonstrated her passion and determination to make the American society a better place for both women and people of color, thus proving her passion and love for America. This passion created a hero, because she was willing to go where no one else would, and challenge the …show more content…

These feminist activists were the first women historians in many ways, and none more so than Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Candy Stanton. As stated in the 19th amendment, ?The right of citizens to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.? Although the amendment was first introduced to Congress in 1878, it wasn't until 1919 that it had finally become such an important cause that it could no longer be ignored. In the history of feminism, women's demands for fair and equitable treatment in politics figure prominently. Women's exclusion from voting called for an attack on discriminatory traditions and a significant modification in the acceptable way to treat any member of society, which treated women as second-class citizens. In all of its failures and struggles, after facing skeptics and a discriminatory Congress, through the dedication of Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Candy Stanton, and many other feminists and suffragists; the women of America are treated as equals despite the biological difference between the

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