Aug 20, 2021
"#MeToo as an idea isn’t new....(W)omen journalists (have been) shedding light on the obstacles, indignities, and violence women face in the workplace....(since) the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when a significant cohort of women entered the newspaper industry." Lori Harrison-Kahan in an OpEd on CNN.com
August 18th is the 101st anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which ratified women’s right to vote. What most people do not know, is that the fight for women’s voting rights was also the beginning of what we now call the #MeToo movement. As we see yet another powerful white man fall from the power of the #MeToo movement, listen here to this untold part of the story.
Listen to professor Lori Harrison-Kahan of Boston College explain
how these brave women started speaking out against harassment in
the early 1900’s – and about a prominent (and rare) female
journalist of the era who used her platform to keep the movement in
the headlines. That journalist is Miriam Michelson, who also
happens to be GCR host Joan Michelson’s great-great aunt. (Lori
wrote a best-selling book about her, "The Superwoman and Other
Writings of Miriam Michelson, which Joan wrote the foreword
to.)
You'll hear:
Click here to watch a video of Joan and Lori’s sold-out event at the Newseum about it, and to find more articles and podcasts about it, including Professor Marcia Chatelain of Georgetown University on Black women suffragists.
You’ll also want to listen to:
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