Front Cover.
Half Title Page.
Title Page.
Copyright Page.
Table of Contents.
Publisher's Note.
Editor's Introduction.
Contributors.
Precursors.
1: Joan of Arc: Letter to the English King.
2: The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus.
3: Abigail Adams: “Remember the Ladies”—Letter to John Adams.
4: Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
5: Olympe de Gouges: Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen.
6: Catharine E. Beecher: A Treatise on Domestic Economy.
7: Margaret Fuller: Woman in the Nineteenth Century.
Suffrage And Sensibility.
8: Seneca Falls Convention: Declaration of Sentiments.
9: Sojourner Truth: “Ain't I a Woman?”.
10: Elizabeth Cady Stanton: Address to the New York Legislature.
11: Victoria Woodhull: “And the Truth Shall Make You Free”.
12: Victoria Woodhull: Lecture on Constitutional Equality.
13: Millicent Fawcett: “The Electoral Disabilities of Women”.
14: Susan B. Anthony: Letters Concerning Casting a Vote in the 1872 Federal Election.
15: Susan B. Anthony: “Is It a Crime for a Citizen of the United States to Vote?”.
16: Anna Julia Cooper: “Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and Progress of a Race”.
17: Elizabeth Cady Stanton: “Solitude of Self”.
18: Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin: Address to the First National Conference of Colored Women.
19: Susan B. Anthony: “The Status of Woman, Past, Present, and Future”.
20: Mary Church Terrell: “The Progress of Colored Women”.
21: Anna Howard Shaw: Address on the Place of Women in Society.
22: Jane Addams: “Passing of the War Virtues”.
23: Emma Goldman: “Marriage and Love”.
24: Jane Addams: “Why Women Should Vote”.
25: Margaret Sanger: “Sexual Impulse-Part II”.
26: Emmeline Pankhurst: “Freedom or Death”.
27: Margaret Sanger “The Prevention of Conception”.
28: Alice Paul: Testimony before the House Judiciary Committee.
29: Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
30: Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson: “The Negro Woman and the Ballot”.
31: Eleanor Roosevelt: “Women Must Learn to Play the Game as Men Do”.