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Marie Jenney Howe : ウィキペディア英語版 | Marie Jenney Howe
Marie Jenney Howe (1870–1934) was a feminist organizer and writer. She was deeply involved with the movement for Women's suffrage in the United States.〔Johnson, Michael P. ''Reading the American Past: Volume II: From 1865: Selected Historical Documents''. Macmillan, 2012. 〕 ==Career== Howe worked as a Unitarian minister and suffragist, graduating in 1897 from the Unitarian Theological Seminary in Meadsville, Pennsylvania. She worked as assistant minister to Mary Augusta Safford in Sioux City and Des Moines, Iowa. She was active in the Consumers' League of Cleveland, and later in New York, was a leader in the National American Woman Suffrage Association, later leaving it for Alice Paul's Congressional Union, which became the National Women's Party. In 1926 she moved to Paris to do research into the life of George Sand, publishing a critically acclaimed biography of George Sand, ''George Sand: The Search for Love'' in 1927. With help from Sand's granddaughter Aurore, she edited and translated a collection of Sand's journals. She collaborated with many other activists and writers on essays, magazine articles, speeches, and propaganda plays, including at least two plays written with Rose Emmet Young, her close companion for many years.〔Tucker, Cynthia Grant. ''Prophetic Sisterhood'', 2000.〕
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