The purpose of this book is to clearly inform people on the women’s suffrage women faced in the 1800’s to the early 1900’s. Also, to inform readers on why the convention happened and the events that led up to the convention. Cultural history is the tone as it focuses on Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Coffin Mott, Lucy Stone, and Susan B. Anthony contribution leading up to Seneca Falls Convention. McMillen thinks highly of the original tales about women’s rights and the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments.…
As the author of The Seneca Falls Declaration, Stanton presents how the inequality among females and males is the product of a flawed government. Using the Declaration of Independence…
Women have suffered throughout history. Angelina Grimke, Sarah Grimke, Catherine Beecher and Margaret Fuller wrote letters to express the importance of women’s rights. Often comparing women’s rights to slavery, each letter stressed the importance of equal rights for all. I never knew women were oppressed that badly. The letters these women wrote were based on moral rights, observation of injustice, and suppression in society. Each letter written expanded my knowledge on women’s rights. Although each wrote letters, the effectiveness of the writer’s point of view made some essays more effective at proving their point than others. Throughout this paper I will summarize, compare and contrast, and analyze each letter written to determine which paper effectively persuaded their reader.…
By mimicking the struggle of America’s founders and the women’s rights movement the document uses the most extremely held beliefs of the American people as its base. This makes the document dramatic, unforgettable, and powerful. It is compared to the declaration of independence many times, proving that women’s suffrage is an imperative matter. The words are strong and open the eyes of Americans that women shouldn’t be treated any…
When, Susan B. Anthony (one of the first suffragettes), got the “crazy” notion to be able to have an opinion on political matters, men’s pride was about to pick a fight with one of the strongest forces this world has ever known, woman. When first brought to Congress in 1848, it wasn’t even thought about. No was the only response for such an absurd notion. However, women were just getting started. They marched…
In 1835, Patrick Reason created an engraving of a black slave woman quoting “Am I not a woman and a sister?” (document c). This engravement depict women as victims of slavery alongside men and indicates the brutality of slavery. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a reformer in the arch of women’s rights stated “we are assembled to protest against a form of government..to declare our right to be free as man is free”(document i). In her speech Stanton makes the point that women should have the right to be represented in making laws. Although these issues remained in America for decades to follow, these issues were brought to light in order to equate all people living in America regardless of color or…
The opening sentence in the Declaration as compared with the Edwards sentence shows the different styles of syntax. Syntax in which the speaker intentionally uses threats, to force the audience to listen to, or do the speaker's intentions and directions, as shown in the Edwards excerpt. A totally…
Jefferson wrote the Declaration to declare the colonies freedom from Great Britain. In the beginning Jefferson, preached about how he feels…
In Jefferson’s hands the rhythm and building pressure to the revelation of its three central human rights elevate the political necessities to heroic ideals. In fact the Declaration proved so stirring that Washington ordered it read to the American troops. Stephen E Lucas, in his essay “The Stylistic Artistry of the Declaration of Independence”(3) notes that Jefferson turned to the writing of Milton, Pope, and Shakespeare, among others, and that he wrote “for the ear as well as for the…
The author purposely used the Declaration of Independence as a mode to write the Declaration of Sentiments to show that the society was ridiculous. People admitted that the nation should be equal to everyone, but people did not behave equally to everyone, and the equality only appealed to men not women. In the Declaration of Independence, the author wrote, “……all men are created equal…….” Is it only for “men” or for mankind? When the United Stated won the independence from Britain, the truth was the independence only applied for men because women were not treated as equal as men. In addition, the parallelisms helped the…
The Declaration of Sentiments was based off of the Declaration of Independence. It must be understood the Declaration was written by white landowning men for white landowning men. It entirely dismissed the rights of women or slaves. Nowhere in the document does it address any betterment of women or the lives of slaves. When the Declaration was written, slaves were considered to be property and not seen as people. They were not considered to be members of society. Women’s rights in America had yet to be formed. They were very much non-existent. Women were expected to care for the family and do nothing else. The Declaration does not include women and was not written for them. Women were considered to be far more inferior…
The Declaration of Independence written by Thomas Jefferson, is a document written to explain why the colonies have decided to dethrone their ruler; King George III of Great Britain and choose to take their position as an individual separate state in the world. To backup up there evidence in The Declaration of Independence they include a list of 27 exploitations that he is guilty of. The Declaration of Sentiments written primarily by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, is a document written to a response to the Declaration of Independence to declare the equality of all men and women and to proclaim that both genders should be given “unalienable rights” to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness equally. Alike The Declaration of Independence, The declaration of sentiments lists 16 oppressions of the lack of women’s…
Stanton asserts that government was created in order to protect our rights endowed to us by the creator, and when governments do not fulfil their purpose, citizens no longer owe the state their allegiance (Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. 1848). In Stanton’s famous Declaration of Sentiments, she listed many grievances she held against the United States government. Women were not treated as equals under the law, and lacked many basic rights that males were afforded. When women got married, they would lose their identity, becoming legally dead and private property would be transferred to the husband, these are only two of many examples of how the government violated their duty according to…
In 1848, the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions showcases the grievances of a woman’s position in her marriage. In the declaration, it states, “He has made her, if married, in the eye of the law, civilly dead. He has taken from her all right in property, even to the wages she earns.…
The resolution calling for woman suffrage had passed, after much debate, at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, convened by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott. In “The Declaration of Sentiments,” a document based upon the Declaration of Independence, the numerous demands of these early activists were elucidated.…