9.1: The Modern Women’s Movement

Paired Sources from U.S. History, 1877-present
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Abstract

In the years preceding women’s suffrage, women of all classes could agree on an urgent need for women to be able to vote, since this was an obvious prerequisite for any kind of political power. Once they achieved that goal, the goal of women involved in politics splintered. Women’s involvement in the workplace during World War II interested many women in achieving economic equality. Other women gained experience in politics through their involvement with the civil rights movement during the 1950s and 1960s.

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