More than any other profession women entered in the nineteenth century, law was the most rigidly engendered. Access to courts, bar associations, and law schools was controlled by men, while the very act of gaining admission to practice law demanded that women reinterpret the male-constructed jurisprudence that excluded them. This history of women lawyers--from the 1860s to the 1930s--defines the contours of women's integration into the modern legal...
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Americas Education & Reference Gender & the Law Gender Studies History Law Law Practice Legal Education Legal History Legal Profession Legal Reference Legal Theory & Systems Modern (16th-21st Centuries) Politics & Social Sciences Reference Social Science Social Sciences Textbooks Women in History Women's Studies