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Lucretia Motts Heresy Abolition And Womens Rights In Nineteenthcentury America Carol Faulkner

  • SKU: BELL-6671296
Lucretia Motts Heresy Abolition And Womens Rights In Nineteenthcentury America Carol Faulkner
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

5.0

58 reviews

Lucretia Motts Heresy Abolition And Womens Rights In Nineteenthcentury America Carol Faulkner instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 22.32 MB
Pages: 312
Author: Carol Faulkner
ISBN: 9780812243215, 0812243218
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

Lucretia Motts Heresy Abolition And Womens Rights In Nineteenthcentury America Carol Faulkner by Carol Faulkner 9780812243215, 0812243218 instant download after payment.

Lucretia Coffin Mott was one of the most famous and controversial women in nineteenth-century America. Now overshadowed by abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison and feminists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mott was viewed in her time as a dominant figure in the dual struggles for racial and sexual equality. History has often depicted her as a gentle Quaker lady and a mother figure, but her outspoken challenges to authority riled ministers, journalists, politicians, urban mobs, and her fellow Quakers.
In the first biography of Mott in a generation, historian Carol Faulkner reveals the motivations of this radical egalitarian from Nantucket. Mott's deep faith and ties to the Society of Friends do not fully explain her activism—her roots in post-Revolutionary New England also shaped her views on slavery, patriarchy, and the church, as well as her expansive interests in peace, temperance, prison reform, religious freedom, and Native American rights. While Mott was known as the "moving spirit" of the first women's rights convention at Seneca Falls, her commitment to women's rights never trumped her support for abolition or racial equality. She envisioned women's rights not as a new and separate movement but rather as an extension of the universal principles of liberty and equality. Mott was among the first white Americans to call for an immediate end to slavery. Her long-term collaboration with white and black women in the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society was remarkable by any standards. Lucretia Mott's Heresy reintroduces readers to an amazing woman whose work and ideas inspired the transformation of American society.

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