Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History

by Ellen Carol DuBois (Editor)

Other authorsLinda Gordon (Contributor), Ellen Carol DuBois (Contributor), Christine Stansell (Contributor), Kathy Peiss (Contributor), Jacquelyn Dowd Hall (Contributor), Amy Swerdlow (Contributor), Alice Kessler-Harris (Contributor), Hazel V. Carby (Contributor), Kathryn Kish Sklar (Contributor), Vicki L. Ruiz (Editor), Vicki L. Ruiz (Contributor)22 more, Meredith Tax (Contributor), Deborah Gray White (Contributor), Darlene Clark Hine (Contributor), Judy Yung (Contributor), Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy (Contributor), Madeline D. Davis (Contributor), Rayna Green (Contributor), Elsa Barkley Brown (Contributor), Paula Baker (Contributor), Peggy Pascoe (Contributor), Valerie Matsumoto (Contributor), Joan M. Jensen (Contributor), George J. Sanchez (Contributor), Alma M. Garcia (Contributor), Nancy A. Hewitt (Contributor), Evelyn Nakano Glenn (Contributor), Robert A. Trennert (Contributor), Martha May (Contributor), Deena J. González (Contributor), Virginia Sánchez Korrol (Contributor), Jessie M. Rodrique (Contributor), Chana Kai Lee (Contributor)
Paperback, 1990

Original publication date

1990

Pages

xvi; 473

Status

Available

Call number

HQ1410.U54 1990

Tags

nonfiction, African Americans, African American women, sex, gender, United States, history, women, Publisher-Routledge, anthology, needs cover, reference, essays, Asian Americans, birth control, black women, Harriot Stanton Blatch, butch, California, Chicago, Chicanas
, feminists, Chicano movement, China, Chinese Americans, church, cities, CSYP, culture, domesticity, domestic labor, Donaldina Cameron, economy, Elizabethton, employers, family wage, female, Florence Kelley, Ford Motor Company, girls, historiography, household, Hull House, husbands ideology, immigrant women, industrialization, interviews, Issei, Japanese Americans, Knoxville News Sentinel, labor, League, lesbians, marriage, Mexicans, immigrants, middle class, Mission Home, missionaries, moral reform, mothers, Native Americans, 19th century, Nisei, oppression, organizing, parents, politics, prostitution, Puerto Ricans, racism, reformers, relationships, social roles, Independent Order of Saint Luke, San Francisco, Santa Fe, Senecas, sexuality, society, separate spheres, streets, struggle, suffragists, traditional culture, UCAPAWA, unions, urban, Washington DC, wives, women's suffrage, womanhood, women's history, workers, working class, google terms added, Pocahontas, American Indians, slavery, slaves, sex roles, plantations, The South, widows, New Mexico, 20th century, agriculture, children, New York City, class, violence, domestic violence, hunger, Chung Sai Yat Po, womanism, Maggie Lena Walker, boarding school, blues, music, Americanization, Mexican Americans, cannery workers, five dollar day, rape, Appalachia, religion, domestic servants, WWII, oral history, Buffalo, New York, Women Strike for Peace, HUAC, Chicana feminists, EEOC, Sears Roebuck, Latinas, Latinos, book, google snippet, woman author, move √

Publication

New York: Routledge, 1990

Physical description

xvi, 473 p.; 25.2 cm

ISBN

041590272X / 9780415902724

Language

Description

This revised and expanded edition comprises some of the most ground-breaking work in women's and feminist history. Addressing issues of race, ethnicity, religion, and sexuality, it provides a more accurate and inclusive history of US women.

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