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Graphic
entitled, "The Awakening." This classically clad woman walks
across the map of the United States from west to east, bringing
the torch of enlightenment about suffrage. Notice the outstretched
arms of women in the east waiting to receive the torch. |
WOMAN AS ENLIGHTENERS
The color gold became suffused with additional
symbolism for suffragists, connoting purifying sunlight and
enlightenment; women with torches were enlighteners. In many
of these American motifs of "light," the sun or torch is often
depicted as moving from west to east, signifying enfranchisement
in western states first and the spread of suffrage across the
country from west to east. This symbol of "enlightenment" fit
precisely with the American concept of woman's traditional,
esteemed role of preserver and transmitter of culture.
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An
angelic figure produced for the state suffrage referendum
in Ohio. The angel's halo is produced by a radiant sunburst
behind her. |
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This
suffrage button uses a golden sunburst with the slogan "Votes
for Women." |
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"Enlightenment" was a common symbol used
by both the NAWSA and the National Woman's Party. NAWSA used
the enlightening woman in its propaganda and tableaus; the Woman's
Party adopted as its official motto "Forward Into Light," after
a golden banner lettered with those words carried in a 1912
suffrage parade in New York by suffrage leader Inez Milholland
Boissevain (referred to hereafter as Inez Milholland)[13].
The Woman's Party later employed a variety of banners lettered
with this slogan, and verbal variations, all of which used the
tricolor motif of purple, white, and gold. [14]
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