Eighty Years and More: A Memoir of Seneca Falls, First-Wave Feminism, and the Fight for Women's Rights
Synopsis
Eighty Years and More is Stanton's expansive autobiography, tracing a life from privileged childhood in Johnstown, New York, through the Seneca Falls convention, antislavery reform, and decades of agitation for women's civil and political rights. Written in a lucid, combative, and often anecdotal style, it blends memoir, political history, and moral argument. Within the nineteenth-century tradition of reform autobiography, Stanton fashions private recollection into public testimony, preserving speeches, encounters, and controversies as evidence of a democratic struggle still unfinished. Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was among the principal architects of the American women's rights movement and a formidable theorist of equality. Legal disabilities she observed in her father's law office, her experience of marriage and motherhood, and collaborations with Lucretia Mott and Susan B. Anthony shaped her conviction that suffrage, education, property rights, and religious critique were inseparable. Readers seeking more than a chronicle will find here a foundational account of feminist consciousness in formation. The book is recommended to students of American history, gender studies, rhetoric, and political reform, as well as to general readers who wish to encounter Stanton's wit, courage, and uncompromising sense of justice firsthand.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Sharp Ink
- ISBN: 9788028332709
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 10 mm
- Weight: 273g
- Languages: English
