Eighty Years and More: A Suffragist Memoir of Seneca Falls, Abolition, and the Nineteenth-Century Fight for Women's Rights
Synopsis
Eighty Years and More is Elizabeth Cady Stanton's expansive autobiography, recounting a life lived at the center of nineteenth-century reform. Moving from childhood memories in Johnstown, New York, to the Seneca Falls Convention, abolitionist circles, lecture platforms, and the long campaign for woman suffrage, Stanton writes in a style at once anecdotal, polemical, and reflective. The book belongs to the tradition of reform memoir, blending personal narrative with political history and offering a self-conscious record of the ideas that reshaped American democracy. Stanton was uniquely positioned to write such a work. Born in 1815 into a legally minded household, she early recognized the injustices embedded in marriage, property law, education, and religion. Her partnerships with Lucretia Mott, Susan B. Anthony, and other reformers gave her both a public voice and a historical vantage point. Her experiences as daughter, wife, mother, lecturer, and theorist inform the memoir's insistence that private life and public rights are inseparable. This book is recommended for readers interested in women's history, political autobiography, and the intellectual origins of modern feminism. It remains a vigorous, revealing account of reform as lived experience.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Sharp Ink
- ISBN: 9788028370664
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 10 mm
- Weight: 273g
- Languages: English
