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Chapter 13 - Voting Rights: “The Most Salient and Peculiar Point in Our Social Life”

from Part II - Issues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2025

John D. Kerkering
Affiliation:
Loyola University, Chicago
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Summary

This chapter is a brief history of the nineteenth-century efforts to expand voting and other political rights, interspersed with analysis of key literary texts in which the question of voting rights is a palpable concern, even though it is sometimes not overtly addressed. It takes as its starting point an early nineteenth-century shift in ideas about qualifications for suffrage, during which the prerequisite of land ownership was replaced by the qualities of “virtue and intelligence.” While this shift ensured almost universal white male suffrage by the 1840s, it also provided an opening – albeit a problematic one – for white women and some African American men and women to agitate for enfranchisement. This chapter demonstrates that literature from the 1830s until the early twentieth century reflected and often intervened in the conversation about the “nature” of women and black men, and whether or not they were suited for integration into the public sphere and specifically into the political realm through voting. Authors such as Margaret Fuller, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and Charles Chesnutt (among many others) represented the women’s suffrage and black suffrage movements in ways designed to change readers’ ideas about the “virtue and intelligence” of the disenfranchised.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Further Reading

Chapman, Mary. Making Noise, Making News: U.S. Suffrage Print Culture and Literary Modernism. Oxford University Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, Mary. “US Suffrage Literature.” In Bauer, Dale M., ed., The Cambridge History of American Women’s Literature. Cambridge University Press, 2012, 326351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davidson, Cathy and Hatchers, Jessamyn, eds. No More Separate Spheres! A Next Wave American Studies Reader. Duke University Press, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DuPlessis, Rachel B. Writing beyond the Ending: Narrative Strategies of Twentieth-Century Women Writers. Indiana University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Elbert, Monika, ed. Separate Spheres No More: Gender Convergence in American Literature, 1830–1930. University of Alabama Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Gaines, Kevin. Uplifting the Race: Black Leadership, Politics, and Culture in the Twentieth Century. University of North Carolina Press, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gold, David. “Women’s Suffrage.” In Emerson, D. Berton and Laski, Gregory, eds., Democracies in America: Keywords for the Nineteenth Century and Today. Oxford University Press, 2023, 104114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyde, Carrie. Civic Longing: The Speculative Origins of U.S. Citizenship. Harvard University Press, 2018.Google Scholar
Laughlin-Schultz, Bonnie. “Women’s Rights and Gender Ideology, 1848–1890.” In Wells, Jonathan Daniel, ed., The Routledge History of Nineteenth-Century America. Taylor & Francis, 2017, 275291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, Yvonne. “Civic Capacity and Participatory Citizenship.” In Goodman, Nan and Stern, Simon, eds., The Routledge Research Companion to Law and Humanities in Nineteenth-Century America. Taylor & Francis, 2017, 311322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tate, Claudia. Domestic Allegories of Political Desire: The Black Heroine’s Text at the Turn of the Century. Oxford University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Tetrault, Lisa. The Myth of Seneca Falls: Memory and the Women’s Suffrage Movement 1848–1898. University of North Carolina Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Wilson, Ivy G. Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S. Oxford University Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wong, Edlie L. Racial Reconstruction: Black Inclusion, Chinese Exclusion, and the Fictions of Citizenship. New York University Press, 2015.Google Scholar

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