Women's rights are very important. Women have fought for their rights for many years. One of the main contributors to this was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She fought for over fifty years for women's rights. This essay will argue about which text was more about Stanton.
The first essay was better. It shows in detail all that Stanton did for women. It addresses some of the Women's Conventions she had. It also explains how Newspapers argued against her cause, saying that women by themselves are useless. Even after this, Stanton had conventions in small towns in Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts.
The second essay is good, but more focused on other things. It does still show hard work for Women's Rights. It is though, more about Stanton
and only expresses the way Jackson felt. I would have liked to see how other people he influenced thought of his decisions. Unlike Cady Stanton’s biography, this book gets only the opinion from Jackson point of view. For example, in Elizabeth Cady Stanton: A Radical for Woman’s Rights, Lois Banner, author, investigated into Stanton’s later family who were still alive which gave Banner a more personal insight into her
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a nineteenth century woman’s suffrage and civil rights activist of which she held strong beliefs in exalting the rights of women during this time era. Stanton was born in Johnstown, New York, November 1815 into a socially well-known family within this community, where she was also placed into the highest forms of education that women and girls could receive for this time period. Stanton’s education began at Johnstown Academy and then continued at Emma Willard’s Troy Female Seminary in New York. She married Henry Stanton around the year 1840 and the couple had seven children together.
Text two explicitly asserts, “When the meeting time arrived, she would step back and let Stanton do what she did best—give a fine, humorous, well-planned address.” This provides us with a detail that describes what she could fulfill. Text one plainly states, “In fact, the women asked a man to preside at the convention.” This sentence vaguely presents readers without any specific particulars about this man. Text two also says that Anthony reminded Stanton of the injustices women have faced to keep her motivated.
She lost followers because they felt that men would disown them if they were found with Stanton, and because they thought that these ideas were outlandish. Women thought that these ideas were outlandish because they had lived this way for so long why would they want to change the way they live now. The backlash from the declaration damaged the women’s rights
But “Stanton” put forward the “Declaration of Sentiments document in the American woman’s suffrage movement” to put forth unity between both sexes in allowing “women to
However, when thought of, most people remember her contributions to the women’s rights movement. She, and other feminists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, began to realize that there were numerous similarities between slaves and women. Both were fighting to get away from the male-dominated culture and beliefs. In 1848, these women began a convention in Seneca Falls, regarding women’s rights(Brinkley 330). They believed that women should be able to vote, basing their argument on the clause “all men and women are created equal”.
Like the Grimke sisters, Stanton first started out as an abolitionist turned women's rights activist. According to an article, Stanton was “outraged that women were denied standing at the World’s Anti-Slavery Convention” (VCU Library). From this, she set her sights on a new goal, fighting for women's equal rights. She as well as her fellow activist, Lucretia Mott, organized the Seneca Falls Convention, commonly viewed as the start of the women's rights movement. Before the meeting, Stanton had created a document known as the Declaration of Sentiments.
Through here, Stanton was able to travel and do lecturing for 8 month until 1880 (Elizabeth Cady Stanton). One of her popular lecture was “Our Girl”, talk about education and socialization of girls. It was a way to spread the women’s right movement that Stanton fought before. After she stopped lecturing, Stanton spent most of her time to writing and traveling.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a woman who was denied entry to the World Anti-Slavery Movement because she was a woman. After being denied entry, Stanton realised that women should have just as many rights as men, including women’s suffrage (History.com Staff). When men and women are compared, neither one is greater than the other. We are all equal. Stanton shared the same views stating that we are all equal.
Stanton opens her speech by establishing that the speech will not be about such things that men would think women would talk about. Her first sentence includes that they will “discuss our rights and wrongs, civil and political, and not, as some have supposed, to go into the detail of social life alone. �? Starting the speech off like this, allows the audience to know what the
For Elizabeth Cady Stanton it did not come easy, she went through many hard times to prove what she had believed in for years. This book give a very good understanding of Elizabeth Cady Stanton's life and the many struggles she had to overcome to get to where she was when she was finally satisfied with the work she had done. Stanton wrote, “It was often necessary to travel night and day, sometimes changing cars at midnight, and perhaps arriving at the destination half and hour or less before going on the platform, and starting again on the journey upon leaving it, in constant fever of anxiety (p. 121).” If it wasn’t for her and few other women who saw more potential in what women had to offer, i am not so sure that we wouldn’t be fighting the same fight they did all those years
During Progressive Era, there were many reforms that occurred, such as Child Labor Reform or Pure Food and Drug Act. Women Suffrage Movement was the last remarkable reform. This movement was fighting about the right of women to vote, which was basically about women’s right movement. Many great leaders – Elizabeth Cad Stanton and Susan B. Anthony - formed the National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Although those influential leaders faced hardship during this movement, they never gave up and kept trying their best.
America Adame Mrs.Gonzalez Engl 1302.S63 12 Feb ,2018 Women’s Suffrage Elizabeth is very well known for empowering the first movement in pushing for society especially men recognize women as actual citizens. She is especially known for the speech she did in Seneca falls and her use of rhetorical devices to make sure she has people’s attention and show how serious she was about the subject. In Seneca Falls Keynote Address, Elizabeth Cady Stanton uses anaphora’s, metaphors and allusion to persuade the audience to show that women should be treated equally just like men and should be more appreciated. Due to this speech it started the whole revolution in making sure women would be granted more rights as American citizens.
Stanton states, “When the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one portion of the family of man” (Stanton 1). Stanton used this line to start her declaration as Thomas Jefferson used it in the first line of the Declaration of Independence. Using such a well trusted piece of writing that helped shaped the United States increases her credibility which helps her case in her argument. Another point in Stanton’s view, “We hold these truths to be self-evident: in that all men and women are created equal” (Stanton 1). This line starts the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, but Stanton added in “women” instead of just “men”.
Stanton shows a decent amount of credibility throughout her speech. Although the author fails to further strengthen her claims with some sort of statistics, she still manages to make concrete points that are able to stand alone. In actuality, Mrs. Stanton already generates enough credibility to support the arguments that are being explained throughout the speech. One cannot simply state that due to the fact of Mrs. Stanton being a woman in the 18th century, she automatically receives enough credibility to make her arguments. But in truth what makes Mrs. Stanton credible is the pragmatic standpoints she adopts when she addresses the growing issues that women face in the United States.