Reviews
"Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics - about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity - ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago , "Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship."--Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University, "Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rightsdiscovers a robust conversation about politics about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity - ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago , "Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship."-Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University , ""Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics -about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity -ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago", Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics--about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity--ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher., "Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics - about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity - ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago, ""Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship."--Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University", “Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women’s political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship.�-Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University, "Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity - ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago , "Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship."--Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University , Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship., "Parker offers a provocative and illuminating study of nineteenth-century women's political thought. By including white and black women in the same volume, she overcomes a major flaw in the scholarship."-Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School of Syracuse University , "Parker offers an original and nuanced inquiry into everyday political thought, arguing that it pivoted particularly on the axis of race and gender. Articulating Rights discovers a robust conversation about politics – about difference and equality, about state action and individual rights, about citizenship and identity - ongoing among white and black women activists who were far less known than either luminaries of the women's rights movement such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or critics such as Catharine Beecher." Amy Dru Stanley, The University of Chicago