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Crystal Eastman (1881–1928)

Autor de Crystal Eastman on Women and Revolution

3+ Obras 60 Miembros 0 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Source: George Grantham Bain Collection,
LoC Prints and Photographs Division,
LC-USZ62-62094

Obras de Crystal Eastman

Obras relacionadas

America's Working Women: A Documentary History 1600 to the Present (1976) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones138 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1881-06-25
Fecha de fallecimiento
1928-07-08
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Marlborough, Massachusetts, USA
Lugares de residencia
New York, New York, USA
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
London, England, UK
Educación
Vassar College(1903)
New York University School of Law(1907)
Columbia University (MA | 1904 | Sociology)
Ocupaciones
suffragist
lawyer
journalist
feminist
social reformer
Pacifist (mostrar todos 8)
Columnist
public speaker
Relaciones
Eastman, Max (brother)
Organizaciones
National Women's Party
ACLU
Time and Tide
The Nation
Women's Peace Party
Biografía breve
Crystal Eastman was born into a religious family that believed in equal education for women. Her parents served together as pastors of Thomas K. Beecher's Congregational church near Elmira, New York. In 1889, her mother became one of the first women ordained as a Protestant minister in the USA. Her younger brother Max Eastman grew up to become a prominent socialist activist. Her family support enabled Crystal to attend and graduate from New York University with a law degree in 1907. She had previously received a master's degree in sociology from Columbia University. In New York City, she lived in Greenwich Village and was part of a community of feminists. After law school, she spent a year investigating the working conditions of the poor in Pittsburgh for the Russell Sage Foundation. Her resulting report, Work Accidents and the Law, published in 1910, became a classic and resulted in the first worker's compensation law. She struggled all her life for women's rights and and civil liberties. She worked as an investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations during Woodrow Wilson's presidency. In 1913, Crystal Eastman joined Alice Paul and others to establish the National Women’s Party, which later campaigned for and helped write the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution. She was also a co-founder of the first Feminist Congress, held in New York in 1919. She was a committed anti-militarist who lobbied against US involvement in World War I. After a brief first marriage in 1911 that ended in divorce, she married Walter Fuller, a British poet and editor with whom she had two children. She traveled back and forth between London and New York for several years, trying to find work. In 1917, she co-founded The Liberator, a radical journal of politics, art, and literature with her brother Max, and served as its managing editor until 1921. She also was a columnist for The Nation and for feminist journals, notably Time and Tide. She died of a brain hemorrhage at age 47.

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Estadísticas

Obras
3
También por
1
Miembros
60
Popularidad
#277,520
Valoración
4.0
ISBNs
5

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