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Charles W. Akers
Abigail Adams in her life exemplified what it meant to be a woman, an American, and a revolutionary of the transitional period between colonial status and independence. Her aspirations were not precisely the same as those either of her seventeenth-century ancestors or of nineteenth- and twentieth-century descendants. The role she defined for herself as a woman was that of a wife, but a role entirely the equal of her husband's -- not the same but equal. - Editor's preface.
| Publisher | Little, Brown |
|---|---|
| Pages | 207 |
| Search language | english |
| ISBN_10 | 0-316-02041-9 primary |
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