Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920

In the period 1880 to 1919, the organized labor and woman suffrage movements in the United States brought together and reframed for public discourse some of the most divisive and fundamental questions facing the nation, questions concerning the relationship of race, class, and gender to citizenship...

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Main Author: Stek, Pamela Renee
Other Authors: Schwalm, Leslie A. (Leslie Ann), 1956-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5644
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7124&context=etd
id ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-7124
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ethnicity
Gender
Immigration
History
spellingShingle Ethnicity
Gender
Immigration
History
Stek, Pamela Renee
Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
description In the period 1880 to 1919, the organized labor and woman suffrage movements in the United States brought together and reframed for public discourse some of the most divisive and fundamental questions facing the nation, questions concerning the relationship of race, class, and gender to citizenship and national belonging. Concurrent with the expansion of these social movements, the states of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin were transformed as the promise of cheap and productive farmland and the opportunity to develop autonomous ethnic communities led to the influx of large numbers of immigrants. This region underwent significant change at the same time that debates over women’s public roles intensified and focused attention on the presumed inability of racialized “others” to responsibly perform the duties of citizenship. Through their public activism, immigrant women helped shape these debates and put forth for public consideration their perspectives on important issues of the day. In contrast to historical analyses that portray foreign-born women as politically indifferent, this dissertation demonstrates that immigrant women in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin expressed strong and public support for women’s right to vote and for labor’s right to organize. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, women's rights activists reframed the movement's ideological underpinnings and attempted to recast gendered perceptions concerning women’s appropriate role in public life, efforts that at times served to widen class and racial divides. White native-born female activists embraced maternalism as a means of justifying their increased presence in the political realm, an ideology that elevated women’s public status while simultaneously reinforcing middle- and upper-class ideals of domesticity. My findings reveal that through their work for woman suffrage and in support of organized labor, immigrant women sought to advance alternative understandings of gender, ethnicity, and citizenship. Foreign-born women, more so than their native-born counterparts, articulated their desire for the ballot in the language of equal and natural rights and directed their activism not only in support of women’s political equality but also toward highlighting the patriotism and political fitness of all members of their ethnic community. During labor disputes, women strike activists at times embraced militant motherhood by integrating maternal duties and identities into a confrontational style of public activism. With their words and actions, immigrant women expanded “motherhood” to include public, at times violent, activism in support of class interests. Female strike activists often paid a price, however, for openly asserting their rights to economic justice. The dominant society’s opinion makers excoriated immigrant women for taking a public stand and racialized immigrant groups on the basis of immigrant women’s perceived transgression of gender norms. Historians have analyzed immigrant women’s labor activism in large urban areas such as New York City and Chicago, but we know little about how and why immigrant women chose to become politically active in a setting dominated by rural and small urban communities and how these actions shaped emerging regional institutions and attitudes. Analyses of immigrant women’s political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin expands our understanding of the gendered ideologies that encouraged or constrained women’s public work and the processes of racialization that shaped public opinion toward immigration in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
author2 Schwalm, Leslie A. (Leslie Ann), 1956-
author_facet Schwalm, Leslie A. (Leslie Ann), 1956-
Stek, Pamela Renee
author Stek, Pamela Renee
author_sort Stek, Pamela Renee
title Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
title_short Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
title_full Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
title_fullStr Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
title_full_unstemmed Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920
title_sort immigrant women's political activism in iowa, minnesota, and wisconsin, 1880-1920
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2017
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5644
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7124&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT stekpamelarenee immigrantwomenspoliticalactivisminiowaminnesotaandwisconsin18801920
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-71242019-10-13T05:01:52Z Immigrant women's political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, 1880-1920 Stek, Pamela Renee In the period 1880 to 1919, the organized labor and woman suffrage movements in the United States brought together and reframed for public discourse some of the most divisive and fundamental questions facing the nation, questions concerning the relationship of race, class, and gender to citizenship and national belonging. Concurrent with the expansion of these social movements, the states of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin were transformed as the promise of cheap and productive farmland and the opportunity to develop autonomous ethnic communities led to the influx of large numbers of immigrants. This region underwent significant change at the same time that debates over women’s public roles intensified and focused attention on the presumed inability of racialized “others” to responsibly perform the duties of citizenship. Through their public activism, immigrant women helped shape these debates and put forth for public consideration their perspectives on important issues of the day. In contrast to historical analyses that portray foreign-born women as politically indifferent, this dissertation demonstrates that immigrant women in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin expressed strong and public support for women’s right to vote and for labor’s right to organize. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, women's rights activists reframed the movement's ideological underpinnings and attempted to recast gendered perceptions concerning women’s appropriate role in public life, efforts that at times served to widen class and racial divides. White native-born female activists embraced maternalism as a means of justifying their increased presence in the political realm, an ideology that elevated women’s public status while simultaneously reinforcing middle- and upper-class ideals of domesticity. My findings reveal that through their work for woman suffrage and in support of organized labor, immigrant women sought to advance alternative understandings of gender, ethnicity, and citizenship. Foreign-born women, more so than their native-born counterparts, articulated their desire for the ballot in the language of equal and natural rights and directed their activism not only in support of women’s political equality but also toward highlighting the patriotism and political fitness of all members of their ethnic community. During labor disputes, women strike activists at times embraced militant motherhood by integrating maternal duties and identities into a confrontational style of public activism. With their words and actions, immigrant women expanded “motherhood” to include public, at times violent, activism in support of class interests. Female strike activists often paid a price, however, for openly asserting their rights to economic justice. The dominant society’s opinion makers excoriated immigrant women for taking a public stand and racialized immigrant groups on the basis of immigrant women’s perceived transgression of gender norms. Historians have analyzed immigrant women’s labor activism in large urban areas such as New York City and Chicago, but we know little about how and why immigrant women chose to become politically active in a setting dominated by rural and small urban communities and how these actions shaped emerging regional institutions and attitudes. Analyses of immigrant women’s political activism in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin expands our understanding of the gendered ideologies that encouraged or constrained women’s public work and the processes of racialization that shaped public opinion toward immigration in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5644 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7124&context=etd Copyright © 2017 Pamela Renee Stek Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaSchwalm, Leslie A. (Leslie Ann), 1956- Ethnicity Gender Immigration History