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Jailed For Freedom

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,667 Sterne; 6 Bewertungen)

A first-hand account of the 1913-1919 campaign of American suffragettes, detailing their treatment at the hands of the courts, and the true conditions of their incarceration. (Summary by Sarah Jennings) (10 hr 6 min)

Chapters

Dedication and Preface, Leadership

29:48

Read by Blazin48

Women Invade the Capital

25:03

Read by J. M. Smallheer

Women Voters Organize

25:48

Read by PopularOutcast

The Last Deputation to President Wilson

23:59

Read by J. M. Smallheer

Picketing a President

29:08

Read by J. M. Smallheer

The Suffrage War Policy, The First Arrests

31:55

Read by Blazin48

Occoquan Workhouse

39:54

Read by Blazin48

August Riots

34:42

Read by Blazin48

Prison Episodes

28:26

Read by Scott Carpenter

An Administration Protest, The Administration Yields

33:23

Read by David O'Connell

Political Prisoners, The Hunger Strike

34:27

Read by Patti Cunningham

Administration Terrorism

37:01

Read by Kate West

Alice Paul in Prison

34:27

Read by Scott Carpenter

Administration Lawlessness Exposed

20:58

Read by Lorelle Anderson

The Administration Outwitted, Political Results

31:26

Read by Lorelle Anderson

An Interlude, New Attacks on the President

30:46

Read by Morgan

The President Appeals to the Senate Too Late

42:11

Read by valli

More Pressure, The President Sails Away, Watchfires of Freedom

28:09

Read by Blazin48

Burned in Effigy, Boston Militants Welcome the President, Democratic Congress E…

24:09

Read by Blazin48

A Farewell to President Wilson, President Wilson Wins the 64th Vote in Paris, R…

21:05

Read by Blazin48

Bewertungen

10/10

(5 Sterne)

suffragettes are my BIGGEST fan.

Great book, adequate recording

(3 Sterne)

I found this an amazing read. I didn't know much about the historical period or political issues in question, but the book made them accessible and exciting. The recording is done by a number of different readers, and it's very uneven. Some chapters get clear, listenable, expressive readings; others have too much noise or are read without much expression.

Terrible missogyny.

(5 Sterne)

These suffragesttes are problematic. Sure, they fought for womxn's right to vote. However, in the process, they marginalized the plight of transgendered nonbinary Latino Americans. Even the idea of voting requires a western imperialistic world view that ignores the plight of nonvoting and inanimate tribal affiliations. These people need to be drawn and quartered like the NAZIs they are. To heap further injury on the situation, the text keeps using the pejorative and subjectative term 'women'. The proper term is Womxn. Susan B Anthony is literally a monster