Cult of Domesticity
Anti-Suffrage Arguments
Leaders of the Movement
Strategies & Organizations
The Right to Vote
100

Where was a woman’s “place” in society according to the Cult of Domesticity?

In the private sphere/ in the home (cooking, cleaning, raising children).

100

Give one social reason people opposed women’s suffrage.

It would hurt families, cause divorce, crime, poor health, or was against God’s design.

100

Who pushed for a federal amendment and used parades, picketing, and hunger strikes?

Alice Paul (NWP).

100

Which group aligned with and supported the Democratic Party (aka President Wilson)?

National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).

100

What is the right to vote called? 

Suffrage 

200

Name TWO ways Emily Leighton demonstrated the Cult of Domesticity in Iron Jawed Angels?

Taking care of children, always by husband, avoiding politics, very polite and lady like, etc.

200

Give one economic reason people opposed women’s suffrage.

Women didn’t understand shipping, trade, or careers, so unqualified for those decisions. Businesses didn't want suffrage because they'd have to pay women more. Afraid of job competition. 

200

Who supported the “Winning Plan,” state-by-state suffrage?

Carrie Chapman Catt (NAWSA).

200

Which group avoided political affiliation and used more radical tactics?

NWP

200

Why did they believe the right to vote was the most important first step?

It gave them a voice in government to change laws and gain citizenship rights.

300

Name one of the four traits within the Cult of Domesticity.

Piety, Purity, Submissiveness, or Domesticity.

300

Give one political reason people opposed women’s suffrage.

Women lacked political knowledge, women know nothing about war/defense, southern states didn't want women of color voting.

300

Who was one of the first women to advocate for women's equality?

Lucy Stone, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Grimke Sisters

300

What does NAWSA stand for?

National American Woman's Suffrage Association 

300

Name one political way women’s lives would change after gaining the vote.

Could vote, run for office, serve on juries, change laws.

400

Name TWO ways Emily Leighton resisted the Cult of Domesticity in Iron Jawed Angels?

Examples include: donating money to NWP, joining NWP, picketing, refusing bail, hunger strike, standing up to husband.

400

Connect political arguments against suffrage to the idea of maintaining male power.

Keeping women out of politics keeps them in their proper place and keeps them dependent on men, it limits their influence and representation in politics, and upheld men’s authority in law and family.

400

How did Alice Paul’s Quaker background influence her beliefs about equality?

Quakers believed in equality for all, influencing her radical tactics.

400

What does NWP stand for?

National Woman’s Party.

400

Name one social way women’s lives would change after gaining the vote.

Social: better divorce/education laws

500

Explain how the Cult of Domesticity limited women’s opportunities outside the home.

It reinforced restrictive gender norms, preventing participation in politics, jobs, and education.

500

Evaluate: Which type of anti-suffrage argument (social, political, or economic) was most common and why?

Social. Many people thought women’s place was in the home, and they believed voting would distract women from their duties as wives and mothers. This idea fit traditional gender roles, so it was the strongest and most widespread argument against suffrage.

500

1- Where did Alice Paul study abroad and 2- how did this influence her activism? 

England. Here she made friends with English Suffragettes and learned radical strategies such as hunger strikes, picketing, and civil disobedience. 

500

Name a strategy used by each group (NAWSA and NWP) and explain WHY they differed. 

Their leaders’ backgrounds and views on political pressure shaped different approaches. 

Catt= more conservative- respectable state-by-state approach 

Paul= young and radical, wants to gain attention, influenced by British suffragists

500

How could gaining the right to vote change women's lives economically? 

They could vote for fair wages, better working conditions, more jobs.


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