CHECK IT OUT
With two weeks remaining in Women’s History Month, there’s still time
to go to the Newport libraries and read about female achievements often
overlooked in U.S. history.
If you think the struggle for women’s rights began in contemporary
times, you haven’t yet read “Joyous Greetings: The First International
Women’s Movement, 1830-1860.” In this introduction to modern feminism,
Bonnie Anderson reveals how women in the U.S. and abroad banded together
at the height of the Victorian era to advocate political, social and
economic equality with men.
Without e-mail, faxes and modern transportation, this was no easy
task. Adding language barriers and cultural mores that kept women
subjugated makes it all the more impressive. Anderson’s portraits of
champions who organized unions, published newspapers and advanced
then-radical notions is inspiring stuff for modern feminists.
Fast forward to 1902, when Susan B. Anthony wrote a letter to her
friend Elizabeth Stanton, lauding women’s newly obtained rights to attend
college and speak in public. Anthony also lamented the failure to gain
“the suffrage.”
PBS favorites Ken Burns and Geoffrey Ward tell the story of the two
great suffragettes in “Not for Ourselves Alone.” The dual biography
traces the 50-year alliance between two women who spearheaded the
movement for equal voting rights.
That twentieth century crusaders still had plenty of work to do is
made clear in “The World Split Open.” In this examination of the modern
women’s movement, Ruth Rosen reminds readers of discriminatory practices
that were common in pre-1960s America: “Harvard’s Lamont Library was
off-limits to women. . . Newspaper ads separated jobs by sex; bars often
refused to serve women; some states even excluded women from jury duty;
no women ran big corporations or universities [or] worked as firefighters
or police officers.”
Rosen delineates the changes that make such discrimination seem
shocking today. Through stories of feminists and thinkers, she traces how
the modern women’s movement transformed America and concludes, “The
struggle for women’s human rights has just begun.”
With “In Our Time: Memoir of a Revolution,” Susan Brownmiller covers
similar territory, focusing on the social movement of the late-20th
century. From profiles of such feminist icons as Betty Friedan and Gloria
Steinem to reports of landmark sit-ins and lawsuits, this is an
encyclopedic look at sisterhood’s contemporary call to arms.
Perhaps the most ambitious promise of all is made by “A Century of
Women: The Most Influential Events in Twentieth-Century Women’s History.”
In this impressive synthesis of information, Deborah Felder chronicles
events that have revolutionized womanhood, clearly revealing how
privileges perceived as inalienable today would never have been possible
without activists of yore fighting for them.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams in collaboration with
Steven Short. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at o7 https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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