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- catalog contributor b11041430.
- catalog contributor b11041431.
- catalog contributor b11041432.
- catalog created "1998.".
- catalog date "1998".
- catalog date "1998.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1998.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 354-368) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: A Transatlantic Dialogue Pt. I. Promoting a Dialogue: American Women Forge Ties with German Activism, 1885 1908. 1. Florence Kelley Tells American Suffragists to Attend to Working Women. 2. Kelley Urges American Suffragists to Adopt a Program. 3. Kelley Describes the German Workingwomen's Movement to American Suffragists. 4. Kelley Explains Illinois Factory Laws to German Social Democrats. 5. Kelley Reports on Women Factory Inspectors to a German Audience. 6. Kelley Analyzes American Sweatshops for a German Audience. 7. Mary Church Terrell Speaks in Berlin. 8. Jane Addams Praises German Labor Legislation Pt. II. German Reformers Consider the American Example, 1891 1914. 1. An Early Report on the New York Consumers' League. 2. Minna Cauer Describes the American Women's Movement. 3. Kathe Schirmacher Reports on the International Women's Congress at the Columbian Exposition. 4. Die Frau Reviews Elizabeth Cady Stanton's Eighty Years and More. 5. A German Sociologist Describes American Women Factory Inspectors. 6. Alice Salomon on American Settlement Work. 7. A German Translation of Twenty Years at Hull House. 8. A German Activist Responds to Twenty Years Pt. III. The Dialogue Changes during World War I. 1. A Sympathetic Journalist Describes German Women's War Efforts. 2. German Radical Women Organize for Peace. 3. A Mainstream German Woman Activist Opposes Pacifism. 4. An American Report on the Hague Congress. 5. Resolutions Adopted at the Hague Congress. 6. Alice Hamilton and Jane Addams Tour Europe at War. 7. German Women Appeal to Jane Addams and Edith Wilson. 8. An American Report on the Zurich Congress. 9. Florence Kelley Describes the Zurich Congress Pt. IV. The Limitations of Nationhood in the 1920s. 1".
- catalog extent "xiii, 381 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Social justice feminists in the United States and Germany.".
- catalog identifier "0801434653 (cloth : alk. paper)".
- catalog identifier "0801484693 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Social justice feminists in the United States and Germany.".
- catalog isPartOf "Women and social movements, international net net".
- catalog issued "1998".
- catalog issued "1998.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Ithaca : Cornell University Press,".
- catalog relation "Social justice feminists in the United States and Germany.".
- catalog spatial "Germany".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "305.42/0973 21".
- catalog subject "Equal pay for equal work.".
- catalog subject "Factory inspection.".
- catalog subject "HQ1419 .S65 1998".
- catalog subject "Labor laws and legislation.".
- catalog subject "Middle class women Germany History.".
- catalog subject "Middle class women United States History.".
- catalog subject "Political culture Germany History.".
- catalog subject "Political culture United States History.".
- catalog subject "Sexual division of labor.".
- catalog subject "Social work.".
- catalog subject "Women Employment.".
- catalog subject "Women social reformers Germany History.".
- catalog subject "Women social reformers United States History.".
- catalog subject "Women's rights.".
- catalog subject "Women.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: A Transatlantic Dialogue Pt. I. Promoting a Dialogue: American Women Forge Ties with German Activism, 1885 1908. 1. Florence Kelley Tells American Suffragists to Attend to Working Women. 2. Kelley Urges American Suffragists to Adopt a Program. 3. Kelley Describes the German Workingwomen's Movement to American Suffragists. 4. Kelley Explains Illinois Factory Laws to German Social Democrats. 5. Kelley Reports on Women Factory Inspectors to a German Audience. 6. Kelley Analyzes American Sweatshops for a German Audience. 7. Mary Church Terrell Speaks in Berlin. 8. Jane Addams Praises German Labor Legislation Pt. II. German Reformers Consider the American Example, 1891 1914. 1. An Early Report on the New York Consumers' League. 2. Minna Cauer Describes the American Women's Movement. 3. Kathe Schirmacher Reports on the International Women's Congress at the Columbian Exposition. 4. Die Frau Reviews Elizabeth Cady Stanton's Eighty Years and More. 5. A German Sociologist Describes American Women Factory Inspectors. 6. Alice Salomon on American Settlement Work. 7. A German Translation of Twenty Years at Hull House. 8. A German Activist Responds to Twenty Years Pt. III. The Dialogue Changes during World War I. 1. A Sympathetic Journalist Describes German Women's War Efforts. 2. German Radical Women Organize for Peace. 3. A Mainstream German Woman Activist Opposes Pacifism. 4. An American Report on the Hague Congress. 5. Resolutions Adopted at the Hague Congress. 6. Alice Hamilton and Jane Addams Tour Europe at War. 7. German Women Appeal to Jane Addams and Edith Wilson. 8. An American Report on the Zurich Congress. 9. Florence Kelley Describes the Zurich Congress Pt. IV. The Limitations of Nationhood in the 1920s. 1".
- catalog title "Social justice feminists in the United States and Germany : a dialogue in documents, 1885-1933 / edited by Kathryn Kish Sklar, Anja Schüler, and Susan Strasser.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".