
The Search for Self-Sovereignty
The Oratory of Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Beth M. Waggenspack(Author)
Greenwood Press
Published on 6. December 1989
Book
Hardback
216 pages
978-0-313-25978-4 (ISBN)
Description
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the founding philosophers of America's women's rights movement. The first woman's rights convention in the United States was held in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848; there she helped write and present the Declaration of Sentiments, a woman's bill of rights which articulated the inferior and unjust position of women in law, church, and society and called for redress. From this grew the organized demands by women in the United States for the ballot and other social change. In this fourth volume in Greenwood's series of book-length studies of great American orators, Waggenspack focuses on the rhetoric of an outstanding orator who has been hailed as one of the earliest and most outspoken advocates of women's rights issues. This needed addition to the history and criticism of American public address is based on Waggenspack's original research of the Elizabeth Cady Stanton papers and will facilitate not only the study of feminist rhetoric but will also meet the needs of those wishing to evaluate the effects of American public address and the impact of an advocate or speech upon history.
Part One, using a case study format, presents critical analyses of the orator and her speeches with the focus on rhetorical considerations of speaker and speech, purpose and effect. Part Two contains seven definitive speech texts of the commanding oratory analyzed in Part One. Of special note is the inclusion of Cady Stanton's famous The Solitude of Self, a speech appealing to the highest qualities and aspirations to people everywhere. A chronology details all of Cady Stanton's known addresses and the bibliography contains carefully annotated biographies on the orator as well as a detailed list of the contents of the Elizabeth Cady Stanton Papers in the Library of Congress. The volume closes with notes and an index. This notable study will be a valuable research tool for students and scholars of rhetoric, public oratory, American history, and women's studies; it will also fascinate the general reader.
Part One, using a case study format, presents critical analyses of the orator and her speeches with the focus on rhetorical considerations of speaker and speech, purpose and effect. Part Two contains seven definitive speech texts of the commanding oratory analyzed in Part One. Of special note is the inclusion of Cady Stanton's famous The Solitude of Self, a speech appealing to the highest qualities and aspirations to people everywhere. A chronology details all of Cady Stanton's known addresses and the bibliography contains carefully annotated biographies on the orator as well as a detailed list of the contents of the Elizabeth Cady Stanton Papers in the Library of Congress. The volume closes with notes and an index. This notable study will be a valuable research tool for students and scholars of rhetoric, public oratory, American history, and women's studies; it will also fascinate the general reader.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
524 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-313-25978-4 (9780313259784)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
BETH M. WAGGENSPACK is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. She has written chapters in numerous books and journal articles focusing on American public address, argumentation, and social movement rhetoric.
Content
Series Foreword Foreword Preface Elizabeth Cady Stanton Introduction From Defect of Sex to Self-Sovereignty The Status of Women and Reform The Struggle for Suffrage Discontent and Reform Woman's Self-Image Collected Speeches Address to the Joint Judiciary Committee, New York Legislature, 1854 Address to the New York State Legislature, 1860 "The Limitations of Sex," 1885 Speech on Marriage and Divorce, 1869, "Co-Education," 1872 "Our Girls," 1872 "The Solitude of Self," 1892 Bibliography Index