Marjorie J. Spruill is Distinguished Professor Emerita from the University of South Carolina, well known for her work on women and politics from the woman suffrage movement to the present. Spruill is the author or editor of six books on woman suffrage including the first edition of One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement (NewSage Press), the companion volume to the PBS documentary One Woman, One Vote. Most recently, Spruill wrote Divided We Stand: The Battle Over Women's Rights and Family Values That Polarized American Politics (Bloomsbury 2017). In this book, she addresses the rise of the modern women's rights movement to a peak period of success, the mobilization of social conservatives in opposition, and the impact on American political culture. Other edited works on suffrage include VOTES FOR WOMEN! The Woman Suffrage Movement in Tennessee, the South, and the Nation (University of Tennessee Press). Spruill is also the author of New Women of the New South: The Woman Suffrage Movement in the Southern States (Oxford University Press). She also co-edited a two-volume textbook on the history of the American South and two multi-volume anthologies about the "lives and times" of women in South Carolina and Mississippi. Spruill was the historical consultant for the HBO movie Iron Jawed Angels and has been an advisor to several museums, including the National Archives for its exhibit, "Rightfully Hers," celebrating the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. Spruill's work has been supported by fellowships from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, and a research award from the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation. She spent a year at the National Humanities Center. During her career, Spruill was a professor at the University of Southern Mississippi, Vanderbilt (where she was an Associate Provost) and the University of South Carolina. Recently retired, Spruill lives in South Carolina where she continues to write and consult on a variety of projects.
One Woman, One Vote has been indispensable to me as I've worked to
learn so much of the history that I'd not been taught about the
nation and its centuries-long struggle toward full enfranchisement.
--Rebecca Traister, Author of Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power
of Women's Anger--Rebecca Traister "Author, Good and Mad"
Composed of well-written, scholarly essays selected and introduced
by historian [Marjorie Spruill, this work is the companion piece to
a PBS special commemorating the 75th anniversary of the
ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. It analyzes
both positive and negative aspects of the long, complex struggle
for suffrage.The writers emphasize the economic, racial, and
cultural divisions that split the movement repeatedly. While
extolling the courage of Susan B. Anthony, the pragmatism of Carrie
Catt and Jane Addams, the militancy of Alice Paul, and the
working-class sensibilities of Harriet Stanton Blatch, they also
decry the pandering to racist elements that virtually excluded
black women from the national movement, the embarrassments of the
Kansas campaign and the Woodhull scandal, and the nativist bigotry
that colored the last years of the suffrage fight. This excellent,
affordable book should be part of every public and academic
library.
Rose Cichy, Osterhout Free Lib., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. / Copyright 1995
Reed Business Information, Inc.--Rose Chichy "Library Journal"
Marjorie Spruill's new edition of One Woman, One Vote is a welcome
and timely addition to the expanding body of literature on women's
gradual political empowerment. At a time when women have expanded
their political influence, when the U.S. not only has its first and
long overdue female vice president, Kamala Harris, when the
organizing efforts of women of color, especially in Georgia, have
shifted the balance of power in the U.S. Senate, and President
Joseph R. Biden has appointed the first female-majority Cabinet in
history, it's only appropriate that we have this updated
re-examination of how we got here, edited by Dr. Spruill with the
critical contributions of dozens of other scholars of the domestic
and international woman's movement.--Adele Logan Alexander
"Historian and Author of Princess of the Hither Isles: A Black
Suffragist's Story from the Jim Crow South"
Students, scholars, and lay readers alike will be grateful for the
clarity with which this book tells the story of the woman suffrage
movement in the United States. An important book and a useful
one.
--Kathryn Kish Sklar, Distinguished Professor of History Emerita,
State University of New York, Binghamton--Kathryn Kish Sklar
"Professor of History Emerita"
Suffragists were the voting rights activists of their day. This
revised and expanded edition of One Woman, One Vote tells the story
of that hard-fought victory, warts and all. At a moment when
questions of gender, race, and citizenship are center stage once
again, the history of the women's suffrage movement remains timely
and relevant--and a really good read.--Susan Ware "Historian and
Author of Why They Marched: Untold Stories of the Women Who Fought
for the Rich to Vote"
The study of the woman suffrage movement has flourished since the
first edition of the anthology One Woman, One Vote appeared during
the celebration of the Nineteenth Amendment's 75th anniversary.
Marjorie Spruill's expanded second edition, published as part of
the commemoration of the amendment's Centennial, is a deeply
satisfying and essential update, attending as it does to the
campaign in the South, the international context, and the first
hundred years of women voting. As with the first edition, the
suffrage story told here will be compelling for both students and
general readers.--Louise W. Knight "Historian and Author of Jane
Addams: Spirit in Action"
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |