Motherhood and Suffrage in Early Twentieth-Century Canadian Women’s Journals

Rachel De Graaf
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Abstract

Maternal feminists of Canada's early women’s movements used their publications to define who should be a Canadian citizen and who deserved the vote. To this end, maternal feminists created an exclusionary concept of motherhood that reached from the domestic to the national sphere in order to justify their own enfranchisement and sense of belonging at the expense of marginalized groups—namely women who did not or could not bear sons, women who could not meet popular child-rearing standards, Indigenous women, and immigrants who were not perceived to be white. The exclusionary rhetoric and ideologies put forward by early twentieth-century Canadian women’s journals not only cut off marginalized groups from enfranchisement and national belonging but also further entrenched the social, racial, and gender divides that alienated these groups in the first place.
二十世纪早期加拿大妇女期刊中的母性与选举权
加拿大早期妇女运动中的母性女权主义者用她们的出版物来定义谁应该成为加拿大公民,谁应该获得选举权。为此,母性女权主义者创造了一种排他性的母性概念,从家庭延伸到国家领域,以牺牲边缘群体为代价,证明自己的权利和归属感是合理的,这些群体包括没有或不能生儿子的妇女、无法达到流行育儿标准的妇女、土著妇女和不被视为白人的移民。20世纪早期加拿大妇女期刊提出的排斥性言论和意识形态不仅切断了边缘化群体的选举权和国家归属感,而且进一步巩固了最初疏远这些群体的社会、种族和性别分歧。
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