The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 8月19日 04時56分


The 19th Amendment was ratified 100 years ago today, after decades of activism and civil disobedience. But the step toward equality was partial: though the amendment’s text affirmed that the right to vote would not be “denied or abridged by the United States or by a state on account of sex,” it did not include protections for nonwhite women, who continued to face legal disenfranchisement until the passage of the Voting Rights Act, in 1965. So when the artist @bygracelynne set out to commemorate the centennial on a recent cover of The New Yorker, she chose to represent this discriminatory history with a portrait of Sojourner Truth, a Black woman who worked alongside white suffragettes to advocate for the rights of all women. Tap the link in our bio to read more about Haynes's artwork and Truth's unfinished fight for equality. Video by @dominiquehessert.


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