Items where Subject is "43 HISTORY, HERITAGE AND ARCHAEOLOGY > 4303 Historical studies > 430321 North American history"
Up a level |
- Fields of Research (57479)
- 43 HISTORY, HERITAGE AND ARCHAEOLOGY (572)
- 4303 Historical studies (221)
- 430321 North American history (8)
- 4303 Historical studies (221)
- 43 HISTORY, HERITAGE AND ARCHAEOLOGY (572)
S
Stevenson, Ana, and Allukian, Kristin (2021) The Suffrage Postcard Project: feminist digital archiving and transatlantic suffrage history. Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies, 8. 8.
Stevenson, Ana (2020) From suffragist to congresswoman: celebrating political action, women’s history, and feminist intellectuals in Ms. magazine, 1972-1984. In: Taranto, Stacie, and Zarnow, Leandra, (eds.) Suffrage at 100: women in American politics since 1920. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland, USA, pp. 201-218.
Stevenson, Ana (2020) From the ‘radical women’s press’ to the digital age: subversive networks of feminism in the United States. In: Guntarik, Olivia, and Grieve-Williams, Victoria, (eds.) From Sit-Ins to #revolutions: media and the changing nature of protests. Bloomsbury Publishing Inc, New York, NY, USA, pp. 51-64.
Stevenson, Ana (2019) The woman as slave in nineteenth-century American social movements. Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements . Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.
Stevenson, Ana (2018) Harriet Clisby’s 'Sketches of Australia': travel writing and colonial refigurations in Boston’s Woman’s Journal. Women's History Review, 27 (5). pp. 837-857.
Stevenson, Ana (2018) The gender-apartheid analogy in the transnational feminist imaginary: Ms. Magazine and the Feminist Majority Foundation, 1972-2002. Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies, 19 (1). pp. 93-116.
Stevenson, Ana (2017) The “great doctrine of human rights”: articulation and authentication in the nineteenth-century U.S. antislavery and women’s rights movements. Humanity, 8 (3). pp. 413-439.
Stevenson, Ana (2014) ‘Symbols of Our Slavery’: Fashion and Dress Reform in the Rhetoric of Nineteenth-Century American Print Culture. Lilith: A Feminist History Journal, 20. pp. 5-20.