Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Feminist Foundations of Family Law

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Feminist Foundations of Family Law

by Tracy A. Thomas
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Feminist Foundations of Family Law

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Feminist Foundations of Family Law

by Tracy A. Thomas

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Overview

Thomas Byers Memorial Outstanding Publication Award from the University of Akron Law Alumni Association

Much has been written about women’s rights pioneer Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Historians have written her biography, detailed her campaign for woman’s suffrage, documented her partnership with Susan B. Anthony, and compiled all of her extensive writings and papers. Stanton herself was a prolific author; her autobiography, History of Woman Suffrage, and Woman’s Bible are classics. Despite this body of work, scholars and feminists continue to find new and insightful ways to re-examine Stanton and her impact on women’s rights and history.

Law scholar Tracy A. Thomas extends this discussion of Stanton’s impact on modern-day feminism by analyzing her intellectual contributions to—and personal experiences with—family law. Stanton’s work on family issues has been overshadowed by her work (especially with Susan B. Anthony) on woman’s suffrage. But throughout her fifty-year career, Stanton emphasized reform of the private sphere of the family as central to achieving women’s equality. By weaving together law, feminist theory, and history, Thomas explores Stanton’s little-examined philosophies on and proposals for women’s equality in marriage, divorce, and family, and reveals that the campaigns for equal gender roles in the family that came to the fore in the 1960s and ’70s had nineteenth-century roots. Using feminist legal theory as a lens to interpret Stanton’s political, legal, and personal work on the family, Thomas argues that Stanton’s positions on divorce, working mothers, domestic violence, childcare, and many other topics were strikingly progressive for her time, providing significant parallels from which to gauge the social and legal policy issues confronting women in marriage and the family today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814783047
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 11/29/2016
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 16.60(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Tracy A. Thomas is Professor of Law at The University of Akron School of Law, where she holds the Seiberling Chair of Constitutional Law and directs the Center for Constitutional Law.

Table of Contents

List of Figures ix

Preface xi

Letter from Elizabeth Cady Stanton xiii

Introduction: The "Radical Conscience" of Nineteenth-Century Feminism 1

1 "What Do You Women Want?" 39

2 "The Pivot of the Marriage Relation" 73

3 "Divorce Is Not the Foe of Marriage" 109

4 The "Incidental Relation" of Mother 158

5 Raising "Our Girls" 186

Conclusion: "Still Many Obstacles" 227

Acknowledgments 243

Notes 245

Selected Bibliography 293

Index 301

About the Author 311

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