Elizabeth Cody Stanton And Virginia Woolf's The Declaration Of Sentiments

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Feminist writers thorough history have struggled to have a voice. Elizabeth Cody Stanton and Virginia Woolf both agree that women have experienced a lack of opportunity and representation. These pioneers of equal rights share their grievances in the way women were treated. Two issues that they share concern of are a woman’s right to education and the control their husbands have over their personal decisions. Stanton was a voice for women during a time in which they did not have the same rights as their male counterparts. In her document, the “Declaration of Sentiments”, she talks about this inequality. Fashioned after the United States Constitution, she begins “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created

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