A Rhode Island Original: Frances Harriet Whipple Green McDougallUniversity Press of New England, 2004 - 187 pages Frances Harriet Whipple (1805-1878) was born in Smithfield, Rhode Island, She gained early recognition for her poems that appeared in local papers, and in 1829 published The Original, establishing herself as one of America's first female editors. Almost a decade later she wrote one of the few published narratives about a free black woman, The Memoirs of Elleanor Eldridge. In her middle years, Whipple turned to spiritualism, leaving Providence to write for numerous spiritualist publications in New York City. By this time she had married and divorced Charles Green - an unusual step for a woman in the mid-nineteenth century. Whipple moved from the East Coast to California in 1861. She served briefly on the board of the first female typographical union in San Francisco and at the age of fifty-seven married her second husband, a gold miner who had been a California assemblyman and brother of the state's second governor. O'Dowd, deftly contextualizing her analysis of Whipple's key works in nineteenth century politics and culture, has created a fascinating portrait of a woman well ahead of her time. |
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Page xiv
... began to analyze that sphere in more detail . Notably , Welter in the mid - 1960s identified a " Cult of True Womanhood , " a term with negative connotations that associated with woman's role in the home , her " proper sphere , " the ...
... began to analyze that sphere in more detail . Notably , Welter in the mid - 1960s identified a " Cult of True Womanhood , " a term with negative connotations that associated with woman's role in the home , her " proper sphere , " the ...
Page xv
... began seriously to question the rhetoric that had been used in previous discussions of " woman's sphere , " gen- erally perceived as an oppressive term , and " women's culture , " described by Smith - Rosenberg and others as liberating ...
... began seriously to question the rhetoric that had been used in previous discussions of " woman's sphere , " gen- erally perceived as an oppressive term , and " women's culture , " described by Smith - Rosenberg and others as liberating ...
Page xviii
... began my research , for contributing to the publication of this book . Finally , grate- ful acknowledgment must be made to the staff of the University Press of New England , especially to editor Phyllis Deutsch , for believing in " A ...
... began my research , for contributing to the publication of this book . Finally , grate- ful acknowledgment must be made to the staff of the University Press of New England , especially to editor Phyllis Deutsch , for believing in " A ...
Contents
The Memoirs of Elleanor Eldridge | 19 |
A New Age of Reform | 32 |
The Wampanoag and Operatives Journal | 63 |
Copyright | |
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A Rhode Island Original: Frances Harriet Whipple Green McDougall Sarah C. O'Dowd Limited preview - 2004 |
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