Making noise, making news : suffrage print culture and U.S. modernism /

In this fascinating cultural history, Mary Chapman demonstrates the importance of the aesthetically innovative print culture produced by US suffragists in the two decades leading up to the passage of the 19th Amendment, seven decades after women's rights activists first met at Seneca Falls.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chapman, Mary, 1962- (Author)
Corporate Author: Oxford University Press
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: New York : Oxford University Press, 2014.
Series:Oxford studies in American literary history ; 6.
Subjects:
Online Access:CONNECT
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; Chronology of the American Women's Suffrage Campaign; Introduction: Throwing the Voice and Making It New; 1. "Seditious Organs": The Noise of Modern Suffrage Print Culture; 2. "Voiceless" Speech: The Silence of Modern Suffrage Print Culture; 3. "Magpie Habit": Quotation and Ventriloquism in Alice Duer Miller's " Are Women People? "; 4. Miss Marianne Moore: "Bulldoggy" on Suffrage; 5. "Straight Talk, and Quick Talk": Conversation as a Politic in Modern Suffrage Fiction
  • 6. Edith Eaton/Sui Sin Far's "Revolutions in Ink": Print Cultural Alternatives to U.S. Suffrage DiscourseCoda: Genealogies of Modernism and Suffrage: The Mother[s] of Us All; Notes; Bibliography; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; V; W; Y; Z