ISBN-13: 9780820458113 / Angielski / Twarda / 2004 / 189 str.
Debates over women s suffrage filled the pages of nineteenth-century articles, speeches, and books. Early natural rights justifications gave way to those based on women s special characteristics characteristics used by vehement anti-suffragists to justify women s exclusion from the polity. These questions over natural rights reappeared in immigration and naturalization debates, which also attracted the print media s attention. This shift in the rationale for inclusion in the suffrage debates paved the way for a reorientation of American views from citizenship as a right, to citizenship as a privilege a view that informed America s response to questions of immigration and naturalization in the early twentieth century."