Table of Contents
Foreword; Series Editor’s Preface; Acknowledgements; Introduction; General Introduction; 1. What Do Women Want? 2. Women, Power, and Politics Part I: Rights, Sovereignty, and Emancipation 3. The Tocsin of Reason: Women in the French Revolution 4. A New Moral World: Early Radicals, Cooperators, and Socialists 5. The Abolition of Slavery and Women’s Emancipation 6. Class and Community: women and the Chartist Movement 7. Women in Revolution: The Nineteenth-Century France 8. Equality and Individualism: Harriet Taylor and John Stuart Mill Part II: Changing Personal Life 9. Sensuous Spirits: Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin 10. Transforming Domestic Life: Cooperatives and the State 11. Moral Uplift, Social Purity, and Temperance Part III: Political Movements and Social Action 12. Nationalist Movements and Women’s Place 13. Social Reform: protection by The State 14. Welfare and Social Action 15. Socialism, Women, and the New Life 16. Marxists and the Woman Question 17. Anarchism and Rebel Women Part IV: Political Power: Reform and Revolution 18. The Suffrage: Patriots and Internationalists 19. Women and Revolution in Russia 20. Indian Women and Self-Rule 21. The Long March of Chinese Women Part V: Identity and Difference 22. Sexual Politics 23. Battles around Boundaries: Conflicting Strategies after World War I Part VI: Recent Women’s Movements and Social Protest 24. "Borings" and Beginnings: Origins of Women’s Liberation in Many Countries 25. Personal Politics: Changing Definitions Through Action 26. Knots: Theoretical Debates 27. The Protests Without a name: Women in collective Action; Conclusion; Notes; Further Reading; Index