The activist, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in her essay, “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848” emphasizes the importance of equality between women and men. Stanton’s purpose is to outline the inequality that existed between men and women and make points that will lead to inequalities ending. She adopts a straightforward and factual tone to get her point across without sounding biased or being disrespectful towards anyone who may disagree with her. Stanton begins her declaration by explaining her understanding for an explanation of the actions of herself and her associates. She appeals to the intellect by quoting the Declaration of Independence and by specifically adding “women” to the phrase, “We hold …show more content…
She appeals to religious morals by stating, “He has usurped the prerogative of Jehovah himself” (Stanton 558) and emphasizes that man has denied women the rights of participating in the church. She emphasizes this in order to synchronize her ideas with the religion no one then dared to challenge. This religious accusation conveys the fact that women are being denied even the most basic religious rights. Stanton closes her argument by summarizing how each usurpation of rights shall be resolved. She employs repetition of the word “resolved” to portray organized and simplified resolutions to each of the issues she aforementioned. She continues to insist that laws denying anyone general human rights, men and women included together, have “no force or authority” and that women have been “invested by the Creator with the same capabilities, equally with man” (Stanton 560). Stanton’s organized resolutions outline the one and only way for women to be given deserved rights. The feminist activist, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in her essay “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848” outlines the inequality that existed between women and men and establishes clear ways to correct the issue. She employs a straightforward tone to convey her facts in a way that will not present anyone a way to contradict her
Stanton accomplished great things although; she did not actually experience what her accomplishments resulted in. She was an advocate for women’s suffrage and that was her goal. She died before she could see her wish come true, but all her hard work and accomplishments made it happen. Along with her friend and partner Susan B. Anthony, Stanton began her fight for women’s rights in politics after the American Revolution. She organized the first national women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls (Gordon, 2009). This was the first time that the advocates for women’s rights formally organized. At this convention Stanton also co-authored the Declaration of Sentiments which really was the Declaration of Independence for women (Gordon, 2009). These women knew how powerful the original Declaration of Independence was in the US, and they were hoping to do the same. This showed the people who women are in the same situation that the US was with Britain before the revolution. Writing the Declaration was a huge step because without it they couldn’t really illustrate how severe their situation really was. Another accomplishment was the enactment of the married women’s property statute in 1848. Stanton and her followers were determined to see change in the property rights of women. In England, women had no
During the late 1700’s, the colonies in America were upset and resentful of the British tyranny. In order to make the separation between the two groups official, Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. Two hundred years later, women were facing the same injustice, only it was from men; and to protest against the unfair treatment, Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions. Both parties of oppression fought against the same outcome, unjust treatment, yet, each fought against different causes and in different ways.
In the Declaration of Sentiments, author Elizabeth Cady Stanton expresses her anger of the oppression experienced by women in the United States. After being rejected to attend the World’s Anti-Slavery convention in London, Stanton was frustrated because she was being rejected for being a woman. This motivated Stanton to share her own ideas on advocating women’s rights and changing the way women are treated in society because of the mistreatment done to her, as well as many women across the nation waiting for their voices to be heard. Stanton parallels the Declaration of Sentiments with the Declaration of Independence by using laws that the male population regarded as righteous and including how it had negative effects on over half the American population. This put into question male authority and supremacy, creating a more concrete argument by revealing what men already have under the law, to what women should have. The sophistication of the Declaration of Sentiments to a document that the U.S. government values highly, threatens the values of the U.S. by making women’s rights a more pressing issue. The Declaration of Sentiments targeted the U.S. government and the population by appealing to their own opinions and beliefs in order to recognize that women were being treated like second-class citizens. Although the Declaration of Sentiments never made a significant impact on the
In Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s “Declaration of Sentiments of the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention”, She makes a statement that ultimately makes
Elizabeth Stanton delivered one of the most historical speeches in U.S history in 1848. Her speech, “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” was a fight for women’s rights. Elizabeth Stanton was a mother, highly accomplished and well educated. She began to relish the fact that women had a lack of advancement opportunities, and were especially constricted compared to men. She gave her speech at the Seneca Falls convention, and caught the attention of many with her compelling speech tactics. Stanton wrote her speech structured after our nations “Declaration of Independence”. She also persuaded others to see the truth behind her arguments by claims of natural rights. Finally Stanton uses a pathos strategy
Most of the American society does not possess a basic knowledge of when the civil battle for women’s rights began. In the year 1848, the first convention of U.S. women’s rights was held in Seneca Falls, New York. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a primary speaker and one of the women behind the organization of the convention. Stanton had many beliefs that at the time were unfathomable to many conservative people because it required a widespread change in how the country was run. E. Cady Stanton has put her name in history on all topics of human rights, in particular: being an abolitionist, suffragist, and what we refer to today as a feminist or equal rights activist. During the convention, her speech “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” called particular attention to equal rights for women in a country that inaccurately prides itself on freedom. Stanton’s work on equal rights opens with allusion to the “Declaration of Independence” and appeal to morals and ethos, leading to a section formed around anaphora and appeal to pathos, and then concluding her speech on appeal to logos, pathos, divine morals, and ethos.
In 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott made a decision that would make history and held the Seneca Falls Convention, America's first women's rights convention and first step towards gender equality. During the Seneca Falls Conventions, the attendees, many of which were leaders in the reform movement, crafted a list of grievances dubbed the "Declaration of Grievances" modeled after the Declaration of Independence but where the Declaration of Independence states all men are created equal, the Declaration of Grievances starts the second paragraph announcing, "we hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal." (Danzer et al.). Among the grievances listed in the document were women's rights to an education; unequal property rights; rights regarding their children and the right to vote which was met with conflicting opinions among the group. Despite agreeing on all other topics, "some members felt that it was too presumptuous to ask for such a concession since it might undermine the rationale for voting, which was grounded in the representation of property rights" ("Seneca Falls Convention, 1848.") but ultimately, the grievance was narrowly voted into the
Abigail Adams’s Letter to John Adams and Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s Declaration of Sentiments of the Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention are two historical works that voiced the desired rights of American women during the 17th and late 18th centuries. Both Stanton’s and Adams’s arguments succeed at bringing attention to the lack of rights women received compared to their male counterparts. However, Stanton’s and Adams’s argumental approaches in their works differed immensely in the sense that in her work, Stanton listed the rights declared in the Declaration of Independence that excluded women showcasing the inequality between men and women at the time, whereas in her writing, Adam’s used religion, logic, and the threat of rebellion in
In the “Letter to John Adams” written by Abigail Adams, and the “Declaration of Sentiments of the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention” written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, there are notable differences and similarities between the two. The authors of each have their own way of appealing and arguing their points. Their viewpoints on social equality is unique in accordance to the time period. And, each piece has its own historical impact. Comparing and contrasting the “Letter to John Adams” and the “Declaration of Sentiments of the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention” there are notable differences and similarities in the way the selections make their appeals and arguments, the writers viewpoints on social equality, and the historical impact of each piece.
Read Gould’s essay in light of Elizabeth Cady Stantion’s “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” (p.400). Pay particular attention to the quotations by Broca, Topinard, and Le Bon in Gould’s essay. In what ways does the “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” (written in 1848) anticipate the attitude toward women expressed by these men several decades later? How might Stanton respond to what they say? How might Stanton respond to what they say? How might have they reacted to her declaration?
If Elizabeth Cady Stanton was alive today, she would be definitely pleased to see the advancements of women’s rights, however, she would not be completely satisfied and probably disappointed to see that many of the issues she brought up during her time are still being dealt with today. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was highly critical of the sexual double standard and the lack of equal education for women. She believed that men should be placed at the same moral standard as women and that women should be given the same opportunity in education as men. Remarkably, women today have advanced far more in education than with the sexual double standard, however, the sexual double standard has come to collide with women’s education.
Of all the issues that were in the middle of reformation mid 1800’s, antislavery, education, intemperance, prison reform, and world peace, women’s rights was the most radical idea proposed. The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was a rally held by Elizabeth Cady Stanton with the common goal to eventually achieve equal rights among all citizens. Frederick Douglass, who became an acclaimed activist in the African American Equal Rights movement, accompanied the movement. Moreover, The Declaration of Sentiments was a document that reflected the ideals of the Declaration of Independence, reiterating the sentiment from the Bible that “all men [and women] are created equal.” Concurrent to the publication of this document, for the first time, women insisted that they were men’s equals in every way. The Declaration of Sentiments was pivotal in Women’s history, although it was not given credit until the late 20th century. However, immediately after the Declaration of Sentiments was published, women and activist groups were inspired to take action towards rights for all underprivileged American citizens. The convention took place in a small town in upstate New York, which was home to four of the five people who organized the gathering. (DuBois, 1999, p. 45) This was the first time female equality was discussed in a public place. The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was one of the most important events in women’s rights history.
In 1848 a group of women met at the Seneca Falls Convention in New York and began to formulate a demand for the enfranchisement of American women (Women’s Suffrage, 2011). Elizabeth Cady Stanton composed the Declaration of Sentiments, modeled after the Declaration of Independence, stating that “a man should not withhold a woman's rights, take her property or refuse to allow her to vote” (Kelly, 2011, para.3 ). The convention participants spent two days arguing and refining the content of the Declaration of Sentiments, then voted on its contents; the document received support from about one third of the delegates in attendance. The Seneca Falls Convention was not a resounding success, but it “represented an important first step in the evolving campaign for women’s rights” (Tindall & Shi, 2010, p.374, para.1).
On January 18, 1892 Elizabeth C. Stanton made a speech during a Congressional meeting, to enlighten the members about the importance of the Seneca Falls Convention. Her speech reveals that every human soul had the right to liberal education, individual citizenship, and the right to vote. Men view women's role to be the essential part of a household's. Men trust women to raise their children, keep and maintain an orderly house, follow her husband’s command and keep him well. This free nation was made by both man and women, risking everything to have a better life. Women helped build this nation, and they help defend in every way they can, from behind the scenes. Without the strength and determination of women at home, the male soldiers wouldn’t have the resources to stay alive. How do they know to do these things for their country, their family, for themselves. With no education, portrayed as frail, and their beliefs and thoughts represented by another human. But women show they are equal to men in many ways. Why then are men opposed to women holding government positions, sharing a jobs with them, and having the same legal rights like voting. If women are considered citizens, then they are entitled to the same rights in society as all others, according to the fundamental principles of our Government. As Elizabeth C. Stanton asks “Who, i ask you, can take, on himself the rights, the duties, the responsibilities of another human soul?”
Stanton writes her Declaration as a response to the inequality in the "Declaration of Independence. Her Declaration contains wording such as, "all men and women are created equal" (Stanton 2035). She continues in the Declaration to list the rights that have been denied women by men. Stanton’s purpose is to make both men and women realize the injustices that are being done to women as humans.