The American Presidency

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 12.03.03

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Rationale
  2. Overview
  3. Objective
  4. Background Information
  5. Theodore Roosevelt
  6. Woodrow Wilson
  7. Eleanor and Franklin D. Roosevelt
  8. John F. Kennedy
  9. Richard Nixon
  10. Birth of the Women's Rights Movement
  11. Growth of Women's Rights (1920–1950)
  12. The Development of Feminism and the ERA (1920–1972)
  13. Strategies and Activities
  14. Appendices 1–5
  15. APPENDIX 6
  16. APPENDIX 7
  17. End Notes
  18. Annotated Bibliography

The Women's Movement in Presidential Rhetoric

Stefano Cadoppi

Published September 2012

Tools for this Unit:

End Notes

  1. Theodore Roosevelt. New York, Charles Scribner,1913, 3892. www. Dailykos.com/story/2011/10/131025943/–Theodore–Roosevelt
  2. Theodoreroosevelt.org
  3. Karylin Kohrs Campbell and Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Deeds Done in Words, (the University of Chicago Press, 1990), 94
  4. www. Lewrockwel.com/Denson: American Mussolinil: John V. Denson, 7.31.2012
  5. www. Presidency.ucsb.edu Political Parties Platforms, 7.5.2012
  6. Michael Nelson. The Evolving Presidency, (Congressional Quarterly Press, 2008). 127
  7. www. U–s–history.com/pages/h1108.htm
  8. Frank Stockbridge How Woodrow Wilson Won his Nomination Current History 20(July 1924) 567
  9. www. Jstor.org/discover/10.2307 Christine A. Lunardini and Thomas J. Knock Woodrow Wilson and Woman Suffrage: A New Look , 1.
  10. Clinton Rossiter The American Presidency (New York, Mentor Book, 1956), 28
  11. Sam Gompers. Papers, 1895–98. Vol 413. Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Women and Economics. (Dover, 1998), 44
  12. Ronald W. Schatz. The Electrical Workers. A History of Labor at General Electric and Westinghouse, 1923–60 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983),
  13. Mary Frances Berry: Why ERA Failed. (Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 1986), 83.
  14. Mary Frances Berry: Why ERA Failed. Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 1986), 61.

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