Sherry Chandler » 2006 » August » 26
I think we should all read this post at Talking Points Memo from a Katrina survivor:
…I think that Katrina proved that America has absolutely abandoned its underclass. We don’t like poor people. And that serves up a big dollop of shame to go with my sorrow.
Yes, New Orleans was built in a f——up way in a f——up place. And yes, the local and state govt has done nothing at this point to get things — anything — going again. And yes, we need to knock some Corps of Engineers heads because of the levee situation. And yes, the insurance companies are screwing OLD PEOPLE every which way they can to get out of paying. And yes, Nagin is a jackass and Bush is a nincompoop.
I’m not saying we shouldn’t talk about any of that. But sweet Jesus, how are we not talking about poverty and class? I can’t watch that footage, I really can’t. It tears me up.
This post was written by sherry
A correspondent has pointed out that, in his Writers Almanac today, Garrison Keillor celebrates the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution — the one that give women the vote — without mentioning a single woman by name. This amendment was known as “The Anthony Amendment,” after Susan B. Anthony. But all the actors in this item are men:
It was on this day in 1920 that Bainbridge Colby, the Secretary of State, issued a proclamation announcing the incorporation of the 19th Amendment into the U.S. Constitution. It ended more than seventy years of struggle by woman suffragists. It proclaimed, “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”
It had passed through the House and Senate, and now fell to the states. Thirty-five had ratified it, but thirty-six were required to complete the two-thirds majority. Finally, on August 18, Tennessee pulled through. Twenty-four-year-old legislator Harry Burn decided to vote for the amendment at the last minute because his mother wanted him to, tying the vote. Tennessee became the thirty-sixth state to approve suffrage for women.
Implication here that the Mama’s boy caved?
The certified record of the Tennessee vote was sent by train to Washington, D.C., and arrived early on August 26. Colby signed the proclamation that morning at 8:00 at his residence, with no ceremony of any kind, and no photographers to film the event. Colby had one and a half cups of coffee and then signed the document with a regular steel pen. Then he said, “I turn to the women of America and say: ‘You may now fire when you are ready. You have been enfranchised.’” None of the leaders of the woman suffrage movement were present.
And still none are present.
Would have interfered with the narrative, I guess. It is a great story.
Though I personally think Mr. Colby could have come up with a better line. Too bad to go down in history uttering such a cliché.
So here folks, from Wikipedia, a list of Suffragists from many countries, including such obscure women as:
Susan B. Anthony
Amelia Bloomer
Alice Paul
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
A nice timeline here.
And from the Library of Congress, “Votes for Women” Suffrage Pictures 1850-1920. This one is of Governor Edwin P. Morrow of Kentucky signing the “Anthony Amendment” on January 6, 1920.
Just a note for those women of you who, like me, were born with the vote and tend to take it for granted, there are any number of women alive who were not. My mother was not born with the vote and my grandmother was a grown woman and twice a mother herself before the 19th amendment was ratified. My mother always votes. I urge you to do the same.
Update: A reader Joanie DiMartino writes to clarify the role of Harry Burn in passing the Anthony Amendment in Tennessee:
…the fact that Burn changed his mind upon receiving a telegraph from his mother that read “help Mrs. Catt put the Rat in Ratification” is accurate, and now the stuff of legend. He didn’t tie the vote (which would have held ratification up even longer) he was the tie breaker, and as the youngest member of the TN legislature made history (or herstory). I like to think I encourage my son to ‘do the right thing,’ as well. Given that women spent 72 years trying to convince men to ‘do the right thing,’ I don’t view Burn (or his mother Feb’s attempt to influence) too harshly.
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Nor do I judge him harshly. In fact, I think he may be a bit of a hero. But that is not exactly how he is portrayed above. Mr. Keillor truncates Burn’s role to the fact that he was twenty-four and changed his vote “because his mother wanted him to.” I think I understand the dramatic choice here to dwell on Colby’s show of disdain — the cup and a half of coffee, the “regular steel pen.” And perhaps a desire to tell the story in a way it hadn’t been told before. Nevertheless—
This post was written by sherry
Neil Akin, editor of The Chapbook Review, a publication in blog form, describes its mission thusly:
The idea for The Chapbook Review has been kicking around for some time. As a struggling poet in Los Angeles, I kept thinking there should be some better way to market my chapbook. As I talked to other poets and built up a collection of their chapbooks, I was amazed at the diversity of work and appearance. Chapbooks ranging from 15 minute Kinko productions to painstakingly stitched or wire-bound ensembles. And, in one case, a poet-artist produced a series of poem-post-cards, each illustrated with her own watercolor artwork.
So, in the spirit of community, The Chapbook Review seeks to present new and old chapbooks from all over. I will begin with the ones I own, but welcome any chapbooks you wish to send in for review. If you have chapbooks you love and want to write a review, I’d also love to hear from you. See the Submissions page for directions on sending your chapbook(s) or reviews. Sorry, we can’t afford to purchase chapbooks at this time.
I picked this link up from Heraclitean Fire. It’s a new site and not much is going on with it right now, but I certainly do think it’s a grand idea. Chapbooks have become a major form of poetry publication but they are somewhat invisible as far as bookstores and reviewing publications are concerned.
This post was written by sherry



