<p>As Norton notes, this book is a prequel to <i>Liberty's Daughters</i>. Norton had found that in 1750, men and women alike considered the 'fair sex' inferior and largely irrelevant to the world beyond their households. In <i>Separated by Their Sex</i>, she searches for the origins of this paradigm and specifically for its signature dichotomy of male/public versus female/private.... Norton's contribution is to chart in meticulous detail the political options available primarily to elite women and the subsequent eradication of those options. A little book that deals with big issues in an Atlantic world context, <i>Separated by Their Sex </i>is also an object lesson in the value of digital sources and methods for historians. Norton recognizes the importance of language: using full-text searches in massive collections of digitized materials enabled her to chart rhetorical innovations (and hence cultural trends) with remarkable precision.</p>
- Cynthia A. Kierner, Journal of American History
<p>Norton's book brings a welcome historical specificity with a focus on words and politics. For readers wondering what there is left to say about the public/private split, Norton reminds us that binary concepts have a specific political and cultural history.... The public/private splite, Norton argues, had one genealogy, the 'feminine private sphere,' and the idea that politics was an exclusively male domain had different ones, each deserving its own history.... It should, in the best way of provocative work, inspire additional comparative studies of women's words.... Norton's work provides an essential framework for future investigations.</p>
Social History
<p>Senior early American women's history scholar Norton, who also understands English sources, is ideally situated to ponder the intellectual worlds of early modern Anglo-Americans. Building on her work in <i>Founding Mothers and Fathers</i>, these essays interrogate the changing ways people understood the relationship of public to private, one of the most persistent issues in women's history. Recommended.</p>
Choice
<p>This is an enlightening and insightful study which builds upon Norton's decades of thinking and writing about the history of American women, and is essential reading for scholars of gender in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century England and its American colonies.</p>
- Natalie Zacek, English Historical Review
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Mary Beth Norton is Mary Donlon Alger Professor of History at Cornell University. She is the author of many books, including Libertyâs Daughters: The Revolutionary Experience of American Women, 1750â1800, also from Cornell; In the Devilâs Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692; and Founding Mothers & Fathers: Gendered Power and the Forming of American Society.