Publishers Weekly - 09.09.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

18 PUBLISHERS WEEKLY ■ SEPTEMBER 9, 2019


amendment’s significance,” Jennifer Schuessler wrote in an
August article in the New York Times, which discussed three
new Washington, D.C., exhibitions on women’s suffrage.
Indeed, in practice, the 19th Amendment only guaranteed
protections for white women; women of color, and many men,

BATTLE


BALLOT


Publishers mark a watershed moment in women’s voting rights


By Sarah J. roBBinS


O


ne hundred years after the passage and ratifi-
cation of the 19th Amendment to the
Constitution, which prohibits the govern-
ment from denying citizens the right to vote
on the basis of their sex, historians, educators,
and publishers are considering the complicated milestone,
reflecting on a political revolution that is still underway.
Several observers acknowledge major gaps in public under-
standing, and in their own, about the fight for women’s
voting rights. “The centennial gives us an excuse and an
opportunity to go back and learn as much as we can,” says
Angela P. Dodson, author of the 2017 suffrage history
Remember the Ladies, which Center Street released in paperback
in March. “It’s an opportunity to delve into the history of
people who haven’t even been discovered yet and have cross-
cultural conversations, too.”
Dodson is among those who, in the past few years, have
focused on the untold stories of the suffrage movement,
many of which center on women and men of color. “Even
before the centennial year began, there have been tensions
over who and what to celebrate—or even how to sum up the

FOR THE

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