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The Weight Of Their Votes Southern Women And Political Leverage In The 1920s Annotated Edition Lorraine Gates Schuyler

  • SKU: BELL-1924030
The Weight Of Their Votes Southern Women And Political Leverage In The 1920s Annotated Edition Lorraine Gates Schuyler
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The Weight Of Their Votes Southern Women And Political Leverage In The 1920s Annotated Edition Lorraine Gates Schuyler instant download after payment.

Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.62 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Lorraine Gates Schuyler
ISBN: 9780807830666, 9780807876695, 0807830666, 0807876690
Language: English
Year: 2006
Edition: annotated edition

Product desciption

The Weight Of Their Votes Southern Women And Political Leverage In The 1920s Annotated Edition Lorraine Gates Schuyler by Lorraine Gates Schuyler 9780807830666, 9780807876695, 0807830666, 0807876690 instant download after payment.

After the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, hundreds of thousands of southern women went to the polls for the first time. The Weight of Their Votes examines the consequences this had in states across the South. 

Lorraine Gates Schuyler shows that from polling places to the halls of state legislatures, women altered the political landscape in ways both symbolic and substantive. Schuyler challenges popular scholarly opinion that women failed to wield their ballots effectively in the 1920s, arguing instead that in state and local politics, women made the most of their votes. 

Schuyler explores get-out-the-vote campaigns staged by black and white women in the region and the response of white politicians to the sudden expansion of the electorate. Despite the cultural expectations of southern womanhood and the obstacles of poll taxes, literacy tests, and other suffrage restrictions, southern women took advantage of their voting power. 

Black women mobilized to challenge disfranchisement and seize their right to vote. White women lobbied state legislators for policy changes and threatened their representatives with political defeat if they failed to heed women's policy demands. 

Thus, even as southern Democrats remained in power, the social welfare policies and public spending priorities of southern states changed in the 1920s as a consequence of women's suffrage.

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