The Declaration Of Sentiments: The Women's Rights Movement

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The Declaration of Sentiments was created. This document laid out the injustices of the current role of women in society, including their inability to own property, their subjugation to men, and their lack of political access, among others. The declaration was highly controversial even among the women’s rights fighters, many felt the criticisms of male-dominated society and its calls for reform of the existing order were too radical. To sum up, they thought this movement might discourage other women from getting behind the movement. Despite these fears, the Declaration of Sentiments was a big step for the women’s rights movement of the united states. The main leading figures of this movement were Lucretia Mott, Sojourner Truth and the architect of the …show more content…
Talking about her education, she left the religious school where she was studying when she was a teenager. She returned home then, and never left that house again. There, she secretly wrote poetry and hundreds of letters. Between 1858 and 1865 she wrote more than 800 poems. This is a huge number. Back to her family, she had a brother, William, and a sister, Lavinia. William became a lawyer, got married and moved out. But Emily and Lavinia never married and lived together at the Homestead taking care of their sick mother until she passed away. As you can see her life was really rudimentary. In her free time, Emily studied botany and produced a huge herbarium. She also kept correspondence with some contacts. One of her friendships, with Judge Otis Phillips Lord, seems to have developed into a romance before his death in 1884. Dickinson's seclusion during her later years has been the object of much speculation. It is thought that she suffered a kind of depression or anxiety or maybe she was isolated due to her responsibilities as guardian of her sick mother. In her latest years she rarely left her room. She