Chapter 1: Introduction: What is Gender? Part A: The Beginning of the End of Victorianism. 1865-1900 Chapter 2: Reconstructing Gender He Dropped His Pantaloons, George Cooper and Henry Tucker Then They Seized Me, Roda Ann Childs Am I a Man?, Henry MacNeal Turner They Were Accused of Cohabiting Together, Joint Select Committee, U.S. Congress An Open, Deliberate Insult to the Women of the Nation, Elizabeth Cady Stranton These Women Have Always Been Used to Working Out, M.C. Fulton Shall Suffer the Penalty, I AM Committee We Desire to Live Comfortably, Washerwomen of the South The Virgin Whiteness Of Our Georgia, Elizabeth Elliott Lumpkin Of a Youth Who Loves Me, Walt Whitman, Chapter 3: Gender Industrialized The Children and Women Will Not Be Sent Out to Earn Their Living, John Stafford Manhood Gives Title to Rights, Samuel Gompers and Herman Gutstadt We Have It in Our Power, Clare de Graffenreid He Allows Himself to ''Have Fun'' with the Working Girls, A Shopgirl Simple Practical Advice, Hampton Institute Now They Build Houses, Carl Schurz The Natural Enemy of the Saloon, Frances E. Willard Not So Long as Women are Cheap Labor, Mary Kennedy O''Sullivan She Called Me Her Boy, M. Carey Thomas Part B: Gender Anarchy, 1890-1930 Chapter 4: Varieties of New Women To Be a Woman then is Sublime, Anna Julia Cooper The Individualization of Women, Charlotte Perkins Stetson Gilman She Longs for the Freedom, Alice C.
Fletcher A Worker at the Age of Fourteen, Hilda Satt Polacheck I Had to Dance with Anyone, Elisa Silva Feminist-- New Style, Dorothy Dunbar Bromley Chapter 5: Manhood and the Strenuous Life The Strenuous Life, Theodore Roosevelt To Live by the Productions of Our Hands, Booker T. Washington To Defend and Assert, W.E.B. DuBois There are no Laundries in China, Lee Chew He Felt Rather Than Reason, Edgar Rice Burroughs, To Be Loyal Each Day Pacific Electric Railway''s Every Employee I''m a Boy Right On, Big Bill Broonzy The Blues Came ''Long, Son House Chapter 6: Sexuality in the Making of New Women and New Men True Chivalry Respects All Womanhood, Ida B. Wells The Ghastly Life of Fallen Women, Chicago Vice Commission We Must Set Motherhood Free, Margaret Sanger Haste Makes Waste, Ida Cox A More Or Less Distinct Trace of Masculinity, Havelock Ellis A Distinct Sex, Anonymous Chapter 7: Progressive Reform and World War I Where Will Independent Manhood Be?, Editorialist The Two Sexes Differ in . the Capacity to Maintain the Struggle for Subsistence, Supreme Court of the United States Governmental Maternalism, Editorialist The Sign of Power, Dean Benjamin Brawley, Mrs. Carrie Clifford, and Miss M.
E. Jackson Nor Felt My Manhood More Keenly, Alan Seeger The Peace Movement IS a Battle, Mrs. J. Malcolm Forbes I Love My Overalls, Women Workers in Vermont Poster Essay: The Vanishing Point, Supreme Court of the United States Part C: Gender and Inter-National Crises, 1930-1963 Chapter 8: Bread Lines and Gender Lines What the Husband and Wife Ought to Do and Ought to Feel Letter, Katherine Dupre Lumpkin These Married Women.Are Chiselers, Writers to Government Officials Their Different Occupational Distribution, Mary Elizabeth Pidgeon Capable of Exerting Authority, Kate Pemberton Let Me Do the Worrying, Jessie Lopez de la Cruz I Personally Am Not A Common Laborer, African-American Letter Writers I Canned Everythin'' That Wasn''t Movin'', Vera Bosanko Political Maternalism, Clarence Stone A Very Inferior Sense of Honor, Irna Phillips Chapter 9: Homely Heroes and Wonder Women A Far Less Virile World, Roy Helton The Bombadier Was a Jew, Ralph McGill They Worked Like Demons, Ernie Pyle It Made Me Live Better, Fanny Christina Hill Leaving Their Children Is a Terrific Worry, U.S. Children''s Bureau I Think the Community Owes Me a Lot, Emi Somekawa and Wilson Makabe I''ll Show You I''m as Good as You Are, William Menninger, M.D.
Straight Yet Willing to Play, Bob Basker Chapter 10: The Unquiet 1950s Let''s Drink to the Ladies, Richard Nixon and Nikita Khruschchev, Perversion and Subversion, U.S. Senate Working Women Have Been Blamed for Everything, Elizabeth Pope My Nights as a Gay Person, "Pat" and "George" Womanly Yearnings, La Leche League A Form of Social Lag, Frankenstein Smith A Joy She Dared Not Reveal, Jo Ann Gibson Robinson Part D: Gender in Rvolution, 1963-Present Chapter 11: Gender and Protest They Were Not Taking Orders From Women, Jessie Lopez de la Cruz Laughable to Most, Mary King and Casey Hayden Not Sure of My Role, Mike Hoffman A Lot of Manhood Emerged in Chicago, Stewart Albert A Real Manhood is Based on Humanism, Bobby Seale Male Chauvinism and All of Its Manifestations are Bourgeois, Panther Sisters Chapter 12: Gender as Protest An Invitation to Action, President''s Commission on the Status of Women Movement Women, Too, Have Become Disillusioned, Kathy McAfee and Myrna Wood I Became a Lesbian Because of Women, Rita Mae Brown It''s My Body, Boston Women''s Health Book Collective Our Early Sisters Would Have Wanted the ERA, Sonia Johnson It''s Not Merely Arithmetic--It''s Geometric, Barbara Smith Chapter 13: Trials and Triumphs of Gay and Lesbian Liberation The Stud, The Toolbox, The Barn, Allen Young The Imprisoning and Artificial Labels of Straight, Gay, and Bi, Third World Gay Revolution Women-Identified Women Have Been Around A Long Time, Audre Lorde When You Deny That Roles Exist, Amber Hollibaugh and Cherrie Moraga A Contradiction in Terms: Gay Freedom and Close the Baths, Guy Straight We Men Must Change Our Sexual Lifestyle, Ron Huberman, Cleve Jones, Bill Kraus Chapter 14: Backlash Men Want to Marry Horses, Illinois State Legislators Our Female Nature Affords Us Distinct Capabilities Women for Faith and Family You Can Stop, Coleen Kelly Mast As a Member of the Male Species, Quarterbacks of the Statutory Rapists Ours Is a Society that Presumes Male Leadership, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Going Out and Cleaning Mrs. A''s Kitchen, Joint Economic Committee My Child Doesn''t Know Me, Barbara Wagner and Roberta Grant Chapter 15: Through the Glass Ceiling? No Fundamental Right to Engage in Sodomy, Supreme Court of the United States We Were in For a Rude Awakening, Debbie Emery We Believed We Wouldn''t Have to Worry About Discrimination, Laurie Quelette Imagine the Worst, Women''s Committee of One Hundred The Real War is Between Feminists Themselves, Ice T Treat the Lady Gently.But Lead, Tony Evans It Just Didn''t Fit, David Harrison.