Abstract

The Little Review, a self-proclaimed Feminist magazine, neglected the significant developments made by the Woman’s Suffrage movement in the early twentieth century. While at first this oversight seems surprising, when examining the Little Review, it becomes apparent that the editor, Margaret Anderson, was not interested in the standard Woman’s Movement nor Woman’s Suffrage but rather a new form of Feminism. By examining the presentation of Feminism and Woman’s Suffrage within the Little Review, a new form of Feminism develops. In her magazine, Anderson neglected the successes of the Woman’s Suffrage movement, because she was concerned with the creation of a Modernist Feminism, a Feminism that sought to make an equal place for women within American society.

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