Introduction: The rich and extensive reforms that flourished prior to the Civil War gave women a hard-won opportunity to participate in addressing inequalities in areas such as women's rights, education, and professionalism. Before women's rights, however, the abolitionist movement provided women with a platform to speak and write against injustice; autobiographical narratives became staples of reformers' work in raising awareness of social injustice. The formerly enslaved Harriet Jacobs reveals the sexual violence that enslaved women routinely suffered. Elizabeth Blackwell and her family were abolitionists and freethinkers, as she explains in the first chapter of her memoir Pioneer Work. A pair of readings compare Dr. Sarah Dolley, a real-life woman physician involved in political change, with "Dr. Sarah" in Rebecca Harding Davis's short story about a woman physician who must choose between addressing Congress and adopting the orphaned children of a former suitor. This pairing reflects the fact that, even late into the century, women physicians were often also involved in political work. An excerpt from Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson's Reading Autobiography offers some critical tools for interpreting autobiography as a type of narrative reflecting the beliefs and goals of an individual rather than as what might be assumed to be a purely objective account of events.
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Using the discussion notes from the Ulrich and Fett readings in class 1 as a departure point, students develop 4-5 research questions about the physician whom students chose to research, especially around the social context within which she lived—for example, does this physician come from a family involved in women's rights, women's education, or abolition?