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Contribution to Book
Frances Willard as protector of the home: The progressive, divinely inspired woman
Lives of their own: Rhetorical dimensions in autobiographies of women activists (1999)
  • James Kimble, Seton Hall University
Abstract
Lives of Their Own explores how five exceptional turn-of-the-century women crafted autobiographies that became compelling, persuasive models for the women of their generation. Although Frances Willard, Anna Howard Shaw, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Emma Goldman, and Mary Church Terrell were not among the first women to cut a path into the mainstream of American life or the only women of their era to lead movements for social change, they were among the first to publish narratives of their lives. Martha Watson provides glimpses not only of the women themselves but also of the autobiographical genre as a dimension of public rhetorical discourse.
Keywords
  • Autobiography,
  • Women Authors,
  • Biography as a literary form,
  • Women social reformers,
  • United States
Disciplines
Publication Date
1999
Editor
Martha Watson
Publisher
University of South Carolina Press
Series
Studies in rhetoric/communication
Citation Information
James Kimble. "Frances Willard as protector of the home: The progressive, divinely inspired woman" ColumbiaLives of their own: Rhetorical dimensions in autobiographies of women activists (1999) p. 47 - 62
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-kimble/19/