Untidy Origins

About The Book

On a summer day in 1846 — two years before the Seneca Falls convention that launched the movement for woman’s rights in the United States — six women in rural upstate New York sat down to write a petition to their state’s constitutional convention demanding “equal and civil and political rights with men.” Refusing to invoke the traditional language of deference motherhood or Christianity as they made their claim the women even declined to defend their position asserting that “a self evident truth is sufficiently plain without argument.” Who were these women Lori Ginzberg asks and how might their story change the collective memory of the struggle for woman’s rights?<br/><br/>Very few clues remain about the petitioners but Ginzberg pieces together information from census records deeds wills and newspapers to explore why at a time when the notion of women as full citizens was declared unthinkable and considered too dangerous to discuss six ordinary women embraced it as common sense. By weaving their radical local action into the broader narrative of antebellum intellectual life and political identity Ginzberg brings new light to the story of woman’s rights and of some women’s sense of themselves as full members of the nation.
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