Sojourner Truth, a former slave and women's rights activist, is credited with delivering the speech commonly known as "Ain't I a Woman?" in 1851 at the Women's Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio. The speech highlighted the inequalities faced by African American women and called for gender and racial equality.
"Aint I A Woman" was a speech given by a slave Sojourner Truth, at the Women's Convention in Ohio in 1851.
Susan Hill wrote The Women In Black
. Betty Friedan
Mary Wollstonecraft wrote about the rights of women more than most other Enlightenment thinkers
Louisa May Alcott was the author of both Little Women and Little Men.
she wrote " women of the nineteenth century"
Women wrote Japan's early literature.
Wilkie Collins
Japanese women wrote the Literature... for in that time, men were at war
Mary Wollstonecraft wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women in 1792, which advocated women's rights to vote and hold public office.
Mary Wollstonecraft
r kelly
Gloria Wagner