The Sex Amendment: How women got in on the Civil Rights Act [View all]
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2014/07/21/140721crat_atlarge_menand?currentPage=all
The New Yorker
The Sex Amendment: How women got in on the Civil Rights Act.
by Louis Menand
July 21, 2014
Most Americans who made it past the fourth grade have a pretty good idea who Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, and Martin Luther King, Jr., were. Not many Americans have even heard of Alice Paul, Howard W. Smith, and Martha Griffiths. But they played almost as big a role in the history of womens rights as Marshall and King played in the history of civil rights for African-Americans. They gave women the handle to the door to economic opportunity, and nearly all the gains women have made in that sphere since the nineteen-sixties were made because of what they did.
Whats peculiar about their achievementand this may have something to do with why fourth graders dont learn about them, and why streets and schools all across the land are not named after themis that it was accomplished in the face of the unequivocal opposition of the liberal establishment. Their story is a classic case of what Hegel called the cunning of reason: the way apparently random or anomalous events later turn out to be pieces in a larger historical design.
Among those who opposed the efforts of Paul, Smith, and Griffiths were the leaders of the civil-rights movement themselves. They thought that womens-rights advocates were trying to piggyback on the movement for rights for African-Americans, and that the load would kill the piggy. They turned out to be wrong about the second thing, but they were completely right about the first....
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