The Women's Rights Movement since 1945: A Reference Guide
By (Author) Christina G. Larocco
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ABC-CLIO
11th November 2022
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Politics and government
305.4209730904
Hardback
360
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
Documenting the history of the American women's rights movement from 1945 through the 2016 election, this reference offers a crucial and objective look at the changing strategies, goals, and challenges of American feminists. Many aspects of women's lives in the mid-twentieth centuryincluding legal subjugation to their husbands, limitations in education and employment, and restrictions on sexual and reproductive autonomyare unthinkable today. Women's lives improved only through the concerted action of several generations of activists, whose work lies at the center of this volume. This book traces women's changing relationships to family, work, education, government, and sexuality from 1945 through the 2016 election. The book begins with an overview essay that places the women's rights movement in its historical context. This is followed by a chronology offering concise profiles of key events. A series of chapters then discusses the history of the women's rights movement since 1945 and what the movement has accomplished. Biographical entries profile key figures involved in the movement, and a selection of primary source documents gives first-hand accounts of the movement. An annotated bibliography directs readers to additional sources of information.
Christina G. Larocco, PhD, is editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography and scholarly programs manager at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.