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Suffrage at 100: Women in American Politics Since 1920, Taranto Stacie, Zarnow Leandra


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Цена: 6039.00р.
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Автор: Taranto Stacie, Zarnow Leandra
Название:  Suffrage at 100: Women in American Politics Since 1920
ISBN: 9781421438689
Издательство: Johns Hopkins University Press
Классификация:


ISBN-10: 1421438682
Обложка/Формат: Paperback
Страницы: 472
Вес: 0.63 кг.
Дата издания: 04.08.2020
Язык: English
Иллюстрации: 23 illustrations, black and white
Размер: 22.10 x 14.48 x 3.30 cm
Читательская аудитория: Tertiary education (us: college)
Подзаголовок: Women in american politics since 1920
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Поставляется из: Англии
Описание:

Suffrage at 100 looks at womens engagement in US electoral politics and government over the one hundred years since the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment.

In the 2018 midterm elections, 102 women were elected to the House and 14 to the Senate--a record for both bodies. And yet nearly a century after the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, the notion of congressional gender parity by 2020--a stated goal of the National Womens Political Caucus at the time of its founding in 1971--remains a distant ideal. In Suffrage at 100, Stacie Taranto and Leandra Zarnow bring together twenty-two scholars to take stock of womens engagement in electoral politics over the past one hundred years.

This is the first wide-ranging collection to historically examine womens full political engagement in and beyond electoral office since they gained a constitutional right to vote. The book explores why womens access to, and influence on, political power remains frustratingly uneven, particularly for women of color and queer women. Examining how women have acted collectively and individually, both within and outside of electoral and governmental channels, the book moves from the front lines of community organizing to the highest glass ceiling. Essays touch on

- labor and civil rights
- education
- environmentalism
- enfranchisement and voter suppression
- conservatism vs. liberalism
- indigeneity and transnationalism
- LGBTQ and personal politics
- Pan-Asian, Chicana, and black feminisms
- commemoration and public history
- and much more.

Contributors: Melissa Estes Blair, Eileen Boris, Marisela R. Chбvez, Claire Delahaye, Nicole Eaton, Liette Gidlow, Holly Miowak Guise (Iсupiaq), Emily Suzanne Johnson, Dean J. Kotlowski, Monica L. Mercado, Johanna Neuman, Kathleen Banks Nutter, Katherine Parkin, Ellen G. Rafshoon, Bianca Rowlett, Sarah B. Rowley, Ana Stevenson, Barbara Winslow, Judy Tzu-Chun Wu, Nancy Beck Young




Kitchen Table Politics: Conservative Women and Family Values in New York

Автор: Taranto Stacie
Название: Kitchen Table Politics: Conservative Women and Family Values in New York
ISBN: 081224897X ISBN-13(EAN): 9780812248975
Издательство: Mare Nostrum (Eurospan)
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Цена: 8145.00 р.
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Описание:

Most histories of modern American politics tell a similar story: that the Sunbelt, with its business friendly environment, right-to-work laws, and fierce spirit of frontier individualism, provided the seedbed for popular conservatism. Stacie Taranto challenges this narrative by positioning New York State as a central battleground. In 1970, under the governorship of Republican Nelson Rockefeller, New York became one of the first states to legalize abortion. By 1980, however, conservative, antifeminist Republicans with broad suburban appeal—symbolized by figures such as Ronald Reagan—had usurped power from these so-called Rockefeller Republicans. What happened during the intervening decade?
In Kitchen Table Politics, Taranto investigates the role that middle-class, mostly Catholic women played both in the development of conservatism in New York State and in the national shift toward a conservative politics of "family values." Far from Albany, a short train ride away from the feminist activity in New York City, white, Catholic homemakers on Long Island and in surrounding suburban counties saw the legalization of abortion in the state in 1970 as a threat to their hard-won version of the American dream. Borrowing tactics from church groups and parent-teacher associations, these women created the New York State Right to Life Party and organized against several feminist initiatives, including defeating an effort to add an Equal Rights Amendment to the state constitution in 1975.
These self-described "average housewives," Taranto argues, were more than just conservative shock troops; instead, they were inventing a new, politically viable conservatism centered on the heterosexual traditional nuclear family that the GOP's right wing used to broaden its electoral base. Figures such as activist Phyllis Schlafly, New York senator Al D'Amato, and presidential hopeful Ronald Reagan viewed the Right to Life Party's activism as offering a viable model to defeat feminist initiatives and win family values votes nationwide. Taranto gathers archival evidence and oral histories to piece together the story of these homemakers, whose grassroots organizing would shape the course of modern American conservatism.


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