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Crystal Eastman: A Revolutionary Life

Crystal Eastman: A Revolutionary Life - Hardcover

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Availability:In StockContributor:Amy AronsonPublish date:2019-12-02Pages:408
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780199948734ISBN-10:199948739UPC:9780199948734Book Category:Biography & Autobiography, Social ScienceBook Subcategory:Social Activists, Women, Feminism & Feminist TheorySize:9.30 x 6.10 x 1.30 inchesWeight:1.8012Product ID:SCG971K6G6
In 1910, Crystal Eastman was one of the most conspicuous progressive reformers in America. By the 1920s, her ardent suffragism, insistent anti-militarism, gregarious internationalism, and uncompromising feminism branded her "the most dangerous woman in America" and led to her exile in England. Yet a century later, her legacy in shaping several defining movements of the modern era--labor, feminism, free speech, peace--is unquestioned.

A founder of the ACLU and Woman's Peace Party, Eastman was a key player in a constellation of high-stakes public battles from the very beginning of her career. She first found employment investigating labor conditions--an endeavor that would produce her iconic publication, Work Accidents and the Law, a catalyst for the first workers' compensation law. She would go on to fight for the rights of women, penning the Equal Rights Amendment with Alice Paul. As a pacifist in the First World War era, she helped to found the Civil Liberties Bureau, which evolved into the ACLU. With her brother, the writer Max Eastman, she frequented the radical, socialist circles of Greenwich Village. She was also a radical of the politics of private life, bringing attention to cutting-edge issues such as reproductive rights, wages for housework, and single motherhood by choice.

As the first biography of Eastman, this book gives renewed voice to a woman who spoke freely and passionately in debates still raging today -- gender equality and human rights, nationalism and globalization, political censorship and media control, worker benefits and family balance, and the monumental questions of war, sovereignty, and freedom.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780199948734ISBN-10:199948739UPC:9780199948734Book Category:Biography & Autobiography, Social ScienceBook Subcategory:Social Activists, Women, Feminism & Feminist TheorySize:9.30 x 6.10 x 1.30 inchesWeight:1.8012Product ID:SCG971K6G6
Amy Aronson is Associate Professor of Journalism and Media Studies at Fordham University. Formerly an editor at Working Woman and Ms., she now serves as an editor for Media History. She is the author of Taking Liberties: Early American Women's Magazines and Their Readers.
Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Amy Aronson

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