1999
DOI: 10.1353/jowh.2003.0122
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Respecting "the wise allotment of our sphere": White Women and Politics in Mississippi, 1840-1860

Abstract: Examining women's involvement in Mississippi politics during the 1840s and 1850s, this article suggests that many literate, mostly upper-class white women took an interest in electoral politics, read the party press, and occasionally spoke in public. The majority of white women from all classes attended one or two functions every campaign season. Their widespread presence underscores the social significance of party politics as a community event. Similar to studies of northern states, this investigation offers… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…15 Christopher Olsen interpreted women's involvement in electoral politics, reading of the party press, and public speaking as evidence that separate spheres was a "fiction." 16 Although critiques to expand separate spheres ideology have continued, the majority of scholars do not agree with critics who would throw out the ideology all together. Instead the demand for inclusion of race as a category of analysis, along with gender, has helped to propel the conversation even further to include multiple layers of examination when trying to analyze women's spheres of influence.…”
Section: Separate Spheres Ideologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…15 Christopher Olsen interpreted women's involvement in electoral politics, reading of the party press, and public speaking as evidence that separate spheres was a "fiction." 16 Although critiques to expand separate spheres ideology have continued, the majority of scholars do not agree with critics who would throw out the ideology all together. Instead the demand for inclusion of race as a category of analysis, along with gender, has helped to propel the conversation even further to include multiple layers of examination when trying to analyze women's spheres of influence.…”
Section: Separate Spheres Ideologymentioning
confidence: 99%