The Difference the Nineteenth Amendment Made- Seminar

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The Difference the Nineteenth Amendment Made: Southern Black Women and the Reconstruction of American Politics

Author: Liette Gidlow, Wayne State University
Comment: Susan Ware, Schlesinger Library

Many scholars have argued that though the enfranchisement of women was laudable, not much changed after women got the vote: the suffrage coalition splintered, women’s voter turnout was low, and the progressive reforms promised by suffragists failed to materialize. This interpretation, however, does not fully account for the activities of aspiring African American women voters in the Jim Crow South at the time or more broadly across the U.S. in the decades since. This paper argues that southern Black women’s efforts to vote, successful and otherwise, transformed not only the mid-century Black freedom struggle but political parties, election procedures, and social movements on the right and the left.

The Boston Seminar on Modern American Society & Culture invites you to come join the conversation. The seminar brings together a diverse group of scholars and interested members of the public to workshop a pre-circulated paper. Discussion is followed by a reception of light refreshments from 6:45-7:30 PM. Our sessions are free and open to everyone.