WOMEN WRITERS IN THE U N I T E D STATES A Timeline of Literary, Cultural, and Social History
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WOMEN WRITERS IN THE U N I T E D STATES A Timeline of Literary, Cultural, and Social History
CY NT H I A J . D A Y I S AND
KATH RYN WEST
New York
Oxford
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
1996
Oxford University Press Athens Calcutta
Oxford New York Auckland Bangkok Bombay Cape Town
Florence
Dar es Salaam
Hong Kong
Kuala Lumpur
Madras
Istanbul Madrid
Delhi
Karachi Melbourne
Mexico City Nairobi Paris Singapore Taipei Tokyo Toronto and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan
Copyright © 1996 by Oxford University Press, Inc. Published by Oxford University Press, Inc., 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 Oxford is a registered trademark oi" Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Davis, Cynthia J., 1964Women writers in the United States: a timeline ol literary, cultural, and social history / Cynthia J. Davis and Kathryn West. p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index.
1. American literature;
ISBN 0-19-509053-5 Women authors —Chronology.
literature- -- United S t a t e s - Chronology.
2. Women and
3. Women authors, American --
Biography Chronology. 4. Women-- United States— Biography — Chronology. I. West, Kathryn, 1962. H. Title. PSH7.DK38 810.9'9287-dc20
1996 95-31815
135798642 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
for all the women, for all they've done, and especially for three,
Cathy N. Davidson, Sally A. West, and
Kathryn Ann Davis
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS r irst and foremost we thank Cathy Davidson and Linda WagnerMartin for giving us the opportunity to contribute to their The Oxford Companion to Women's Writing in the United States and to put together a timeline for it. They provide invaluable models of scholarship and friendship. This book would not exist without Cathy's advice, guidance, and support. At Oxford University Press, we thank Liz Maguire for taking an interest in this project and guiding us through the first stages of production. Although she left Oxford before it was completed, a piece of it certainly belongs to her. We also thank Elda Rotor for her assistance. Most of all, Joellyn Ausanka has provided hours of essential advice and assistance and has been unfailingly wise, astute, and cheerful over the course of a project that just grew and grew. We couldn't have done it without her. Thanks to Frances Frame for indispensable computer assistance with the index. Finally, to all the friends and family who have borne with us through long hours of work and worry, excitement and despair, thank you for being there.
FOREWORD If a student came to me wanting to know what everyday life was like for women living in the United States a century ago, this is the book I would lend her. From this book she would learn, virtually at a glance, that life in 1895 was as complicated as it is in 1995, with women of different economic, regional, religious, and racial backgrounds living lives that were sometimes parallel and sometimes radically divergent. She would learn how women, then as now, were encouraged by advertisers to emulate unrealistic beauty standards: in 1895, the model was the "Gibson Girl," an upper-class white woman with a corseted hour-glass figure, upswept hair, and a pure ivory complexion. Since Sears, Roebuck distributed its first catalogue in 1895, women all across the nation could purchase (or just dream about) dresses and undergarments that promised to transform them into mail-order Gibson Girls. Many African American women, influenced by this ideal of white womanhood, bought creams that purported to lighten the skin, as well as pomades and hair straighteners. Recognizing a trend, Sarah Breedlove, an African American entrepreneur, went on to found the Madame C. J. Walker laboratories for black hair-care products, eventually becoming the richest business woman in America. On a more serious note, my inquisitive student would learn from this book that a hundred years ago suffragists celebrated every time another state (typically out West) granted women of all races the right to vote (in 1895, it was Utah and Idaho). Yet these were also ominous times politically, particularly for recent immigrants and women of color. In 1895, the newly formed Immigration Restriction League sounded the alarm against the social and economic "costs" of immigration, leading to increased restrictions on immigration and on the civil rights of people deemed to be immigrants, an anti-immigration movement that foreshadowed our own era and California's
vi $ Foreword
recently passed Proposition 187. Similarly, in the South, Jim Crow laws existed and would be legally sanctioned by the Messy v. Ferguson ruling of 1896. A high-sounding phrase, "separate but equal," was used to justify segregation, but it did not obscure the horror of racist violence, meticulously documented by black journalist and activist Ida B. Wells in A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Cases of Lynching* m the United States, 1892 1893-1894. Looking across the pages, my student could learn not only how women lived but what they wrote and read. She would learn that women were writing other controversial books a hundred years ago, including suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton's critique of the masculine bias in the Judeo-Christian tradition, The Woman's Bible. She would also learn that 1895 was a rich year for women's literature: Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson published a volume of stories, Mary E, Wilkins Freeman a mystery novella, Sarah Orne Jewett a short-story collection, Constance Fenimore Woolson a novel, Josephine Lazarus a religious treatise (The Spirit of Judaism); Elizabeth Stoddard and Emily Pauline Johnson (Tehakionwake) each published a volume of poems. On the other hand, elite writers were feeling themselves threatened, both by the emergence of increasingly popular pulp novels and magazines and by a new cultural form, the cinema. In 1896, New Yorkers flocked to the first public exhibition of motion pictures. The same year, shocked viewers began calling for stricter movie censorship after seeing actors May Irwin and John C. Rice kiss on the silver screen, As much as any reference book I know, this one gives a feel for the texture of life for women of other eras. It does so through a principle of determined inclusiveness. That is, most books bracket off knowledge into disciplines (literature, sociology7, history, art, political science, economics, etc.) or group interdisciplinary studies around core interests (women's studies, ethnic studies, cultural studies, etc.), whereas Women Writers in the United States conjoins all of these fields and interests in one efficient timeline. 1 learn something new every time I leaf through these pages. With knowledge, wisdom, vigor, rigor, and wit, Cynthia J. Davis and Kathryn West have assembled the fullest, most extensive, and most thoughtful timeline of women's writing and women's lives compiled to date. They have been able to do so precisely because we have now had over two decades of feminist research on topics that once were not even considered legitimate. The wealth of research produced, collectively, by women's studies scholars over the last decades is mind-boggling, and
Foreword
this book manages to bring much of that work together, in a form both condensed and original. As Davis and West mention in their introduction, they began their project as an "addendum" to The Oxford Companion to Women's Writing in the United States. However, the more they researched, the longer their timeline grew, until it evolved into a book in its own right. A labor of love, this fact-filled and fascinating book is the best labor-saving device I know for anyone who teaches or studies the history of literature of the United States. But this is more than a handy reference guide. Through its visual arrangement of literary history against social and cultural history (of text against context), one gains a new appreciation for women's lives and women's writing. This book helps us understand the complex forces that inspired women to express their ideas, opinions, and imaginings in print and helps make visible the lens through which women understood the books they read. Women Writers in the United States both nourishes and whets the appetite. It reveals new connections, new juxtapositions, and new contradictions. Even glancing through it, one expands one's definition of "women's history" or "women's literature." I can easily imagine how this book will generate important new courses and even new books in women's cultural studies. Cynthia J. Davis and Kathryn West are to be congratulated and thanked. Women Writers in the United States is a stunning achievement. October, 1995
Cathy N. Davidson
* vii
This page intentionally left blank
INTRODUCTION In June of 1993, after a lengthy search in which numerous eminent male candidates' names were raised and appraised, President Clinton appointed D.C. Court of Appeals Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Supreme Court. After a speedy confirmation process, Ginsburg joined Sandra Day O'Connor on the bench and became the second woman (after O'Connor) to so serve in U.S. history. In her acceptance speech the day of Clinton's nomination, Ginsburg cannily addressed the promises and possibilities of being a "second," arguing that "it contributes to the end of the days when women, at least half the talent pool in our society, appear in high places only as one~ata-time performers." 1 Whether or not those days are at an end, we envision this project as yet further evidence that women are not nor have they ever been "one-at-a-time performers," that their accomplishments are by no means exceptions that prove the rule. Although we have spent a lot of time unearthing and acknowledging "firsts" in this project, Women Writers in the United States also attempts to acknowledge "seconds," "thirds," "fourths," and so on —as well as to trace the links or passages between the sequences. The twelve years that separate O'Connor's appointment in 1981 and Ginsburg's in 1992 may strike some as remarkably speedy when compared with the temporal gaps that separate other firsts and seconds (and thirds): for example, in 1656 an all-woman jury heard and acquitted a woman of murdering her infant; in 1701, the first sexually integrated jury met in Albany, New York. It was not, however, until nearly 200 years later, in 1898 —when Utah women began to 1. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, "On Being Nominated to the Supreme Court," in Feminism in Our Time: The Essential Writings, World War II to the Present, Miriam Schneir, ed. (New York: Vintage Books, 1994), 483.
x * Introduction
serve as jury members— that women were (re)admitted to the jury box, and it was not until 1975 that the Supreme Court outlawed automatic exclusion of women from jury duty. On the other hand, some readers may be surprised by how early and how consistently women have played an active, incisive role in the shaping of this nation. Given that even present-day revisionist history texts often overlook women's contributions, this surprise is not all that surprising. Indeed, it is not so unusual to encounter the assumption — i n some academic works, as well as in the popular media—that around 1970, women changed. That they suddenly became beings concerned about and often dissatisfied with their place in the world. That they began to take actions that had historical significance. Only some twenty years ago, the story goes, women suddenly developed a whole new way of thinking, a whole new set of aspirations and goals and even talents. While this lumping of all women into one amorphous and homogeneous group is obviously troubling, equally disturbing is the lack of a sense of history behind such a premise, the lack of awareness of the hundreds of thousands of women who, long before 1970 —decades, even centuries before -said and wrote and did important, significant, and interesting things in both their private and public lives. This is true of women all over the world; here, we hope to give a sense of the richness of this history in the United States. Women Writers in the United States weaves this rich and multihued historical fabric out of political and world events, everyday occurrences, medical advances, founding moments, lifestyle changes, demographics, conferences, crusades, statistics, inventions, survey results, crazes, and more. These in turn encompass the broad spectrum of women's writing that serves as the core of this timeline, providing them and you, the reader, with what we hope will prove an illuminating and thought-provoking context. It is a truism of literary studies that no work emerges out of nowhere; what we hope to provide is the rich tapestry of the "somewhere" in which these authors lived and wrote. "No work emerges out of nowhere" is eminently true of this volume, too. Women Writers in the United States grew out of our work as research assistants for Cathy N. Davidson and Linda WagnerMartin on their The Oxford Companion to Women's Writing in the United States. It began as a brief chronology to be included with The
Introduction
Oxford Companion. Indeed, a much-abridged version of Women Writers in the United States appears there, but what was intended to be only some ten to twenty pages in length grew and grew as we unearthed books and phenomena that added essential dimension and depth to our sketch of women's writings and women's lives. Like its foremothers, The Oxford Companion and The Oxford Book of Women's Writing in the United States, Women Writers in the United States operates with a broad definition of "writing" that has led us to locate in "Texts —U.S. Women Writing" not only authors of fiction and nonfiction but magazine and newspaper editors, readers and their habits, songwriters, and certain events important to the fact of women writing in America. Indeed, the writing represented spans a wide range of genres, traditional and nontraditional, including fiction, poetry, short stories, political manifestos, cookbooks, advice columns, songs, essays, social history and analysis, biography, autobiography, medical treatises, books for children, journalism, and travel writing. As our first entry on Native American storytelling illustrates, we also record creative contributions that involve processes similar to those of writing but that are less tied to the published or written word. To take another example of this, one early entry describes how, in 1645, then Governor of Hartford Edward Hopkins took his wife Anne to Boston for medical help, where John Winthrop declared she had lost her wits "by occasion of her giving herself wholly to reading and writing and hath written many books." Or, taking a later example, in 1891 Martha Morton established the Society of Dramatic Authors when women were barred from membership in the American Dramatists' Club. "Texts" illustrates that writing by women can be literary, poetic, social, political, informative, humorous, and entertaining. It encompasses all forms involving words that women have employed to express themselves. Reading down as well as across the timeline, the reader can gain a sense of the trajectory of many careers and reputations. Many names will appear several times as one reads through arid down. For instance, on April 15, 1862, Emily Dickinson sent four poems to Thomas Wentworth Higginson. In 1890, 115 of her poems were published by Roberts Brothers of Boston, but it was not until 1955 that the first reliable edition of her poetry became available —thus suggesting concrete ways in which the availability of Dickinson's poems may intersect with issues of reputation and scholarly focus. In addition to trajectory, variety is highlighted here: Zora Neale Hurs-
$ xi
xii * Introduction
ton figures riot only as the noted novelist of Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), hut also as an important anthropologist and collector of folk stories. To experience the pleasures and surprises of reading across the page, take an example from approximately 100 years ago. In 1886, popular author Louisa May AJcott published Jo's Boys, one of the sequels to Little Women; children's author Frances Hodgson Burnett published Little Lord Fauntleroy; African American evangelist Julia A. J. Foote published her autobiographical A Brand Plucked from the Fire; temperance reformer and advocate of women's rights Frances E. Willard published How to Win: A Book for Girls; and New England chronicler Sarah Orne Jewett produced one of her most successful collections, A White Heron and Other Stories, the title stoiy of which is widely anthologized today. That same year, Coca-Cola was invented, as was an early form of dishwashing machine. Divorce was on the rise, and the Haymarket bombings led to the hanging of four protesters. Electric railways were introduced, the American Federation of Labor was formed, and the Statue of Liberty was dedicated with a poem by Emma Lazarus on the base. We might not think of Louisa May AJcott, Coca-Cola, divorce, and electric railways in the same breath, but to do so expands and adds nuance to our understanding of the world in which these authors lived and wrote. Thus, "Texts" is paralleled by "Contexts," a chronology of social, political, cultural, medical, and legal issues and events important to women's lives and texts. This section depicts not only the particularities of daily existence but also the major and minor events that create the full portrait of any cultural moment—events that include, for example, the 1649 trial of Goodwife Norman and Mary Hammon for lesbianism; the 1848 beginning of the spiritualism movement in the U.S. when the Fox sisters heard astonishing rapping sounds in their house; the 1939 introduction by Leona Lax, an employee of Warner Bros., of cup-sizing for brassieres; and the 1993 appointment of the first woman U.S. Attorney General, Janet Reno. In "Contexts" as with "Texts," we have been expansive in our sense of what matters, balancing events traditionally seen as historically relevant —such as wars, strikes, and court decisions —with often overlooked but still significant moments. These latter include the fact that a squaw-sachem, known to the colonists as the "Massachusetts Queen," governed the Massachusetts Confederacy for nearly fifty years beginning some time before 1620; that Ann Lee, leader of the Shaker religious sect (which she established in 1774). became,
Introduction
through her dissent and imprisonment in 1780 during the Revolutionary War, the nation's first conscientious objector; that: the first known strike involving women occurred in 1824, when male and female weavers in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, protested increasing hours and decreasing wages (four years later in New Hampshire women needleworkers would strike alone citing the same complaints); that the first known native-born U.S. woman public speaker was an African American, Maria Stewart, who began her career in the 1830s; that a woman, Maria Mitchell, was the first person to identify a comet with a telescope (1847) and thus became the first woman elected to the American Academy of Aits and Sciences (1850); that we may have already had a woman president given that Edith Boiling Wilson took on many of her spouse's presidential responsibilities after her husband, Woodrow, suffered a stroke in 1919; and that among those taken hostage in Teheran, Iran, in 1979 were two women, Kathryn Koob and Elizabeth Ann Swift. While our primary focus throughout this section is on events clearly related to women's writing and lives, we have also chosen to include items that are, perhaps, more tangentially or covertly connected but nonetheless integral to the cultural moment(s) chronicled—for example, events of national and international importance such as wars, assassinations, uprisings, demographic trends, and immigration policies. And while we have attempted to document as amply as possible instances where women have acted as historical agents, we also include social and political policies not necessarily enacted by women but that affect their ability to function in the world —such as the passage of the Fugitive Slave Laws of 1793 and 1850, or of the Comstock Law in 1873, which outlawed birth control information being passed or advertised through the mails. In addition, it should be noted that in some sense all our recorded "firsts" are provisional, since women's history remains in a process of rediscovery. Women Writers in the United States aims to be comprehensive but is clearly not exhaustive. We are keenly aware that the history we present here is still being written and rewritten. The important archival work scholars continue to perform convinces us that despite the wealth of detail we have attempted to provide here we will still have overlooked much. That this is so is proven by such instances as when, in 1993, Frances Smith Foster, who was compiling and editing an anthology of writings by Frances E. W. Harper, author of lola Leroy (1892), found three previously undiscovered short novels by Harper: Min-
* xiii
xiv
+ Introduction
nie's Sacrijice, Sowing and Reaping, and Trial and Triumph. Serialized between 1867 and 1888 in the Christian Recorder—the official publication of the African Methodist Episcopal Church —these novels significantly enlarge the body of Harper's work available to us (they can now be found in one volume published in 1994 by Beacon). As Foster notes, "these three texts offer an unprecedented opportunity to witness the development of a nineteenth-century African American writer's concerns and style over a forty-year period. . . . but probably most important, these three novels are interesting, provocative works that should enlarge and diversify the current readership of African American literature." 2 Foster's discovery of the three Harper novels is in many ways paradigmatic for us. It reminds us that many writings by women, perhaps particularly by women of color, remain to be unearthed. It also reminds us of the many and varied understandings such rediscoveries can provide — insights into aesthetic tastes, social concerns, political causes, domestic life, and religious beliefs. And it reminds us that the project we present here is, in many respects, woefully incomplete. If the known number of nineteenth-century novels written by African American women can increase by thirty percent with Foster's find, what other treasures may be lurking in attics, old magazines, and little-explored archives? Today's "first" could tomorrow be a "second" or a "third." While this fact makes our task impossible to complete, it also makes it that much more exciting. Our goal has been to present as wide an array of writings and events relevant to women's writing in the U.S. as possible. The process has, inevitably, required establishing some parameters. We present here primarily writers born in the geographical United States, or who, through their citizenship, publishing choices, or living arrangements have identified themselves as "American." This choice meant that we were unable to include entries for the rich writings of Canadian and Latin American authors who have been both popular and critically acclaimed in the United States, such as Canadians Margaret Atwood, Joy Kogawa, and Lucy Maud Montgomery (author of the Anne of Green Gables series), or Latin American authors such as Laura Esquivel, Elena Poniatowska, and Isabel Allende. In a few cases, we have decided to include in "Contexts" influential works by 2. Frances Smith Foster, cd., "Minnie's Sacrifice," "Sowing and Reaping," "Trial and Triumph": Three Rediscovered Novels by Frances E. W. Harper (Boston: Beacon Press, 1994), xii.
Introduction
women of other nations that have been extremely important to U.S. women and women authors, such as Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own (1929), and Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex (1953). In addition, the wealth of data post-first and especially postsecond waves of feminist movement tilts this timeline toward the twentieth century. In part, this is a structural problem; by arranging our data according to years, it proved much more difficult to excavate information in eras that were less oriented toward numbercrunching and statistics than is our own period. When combined with the fact that in the early days of this country women were much more apt to be left out of records —at times included under their husband's or father's name or simply considered not worth counting or accounting for —our efforts to do justice to the women of this period met with some difficult challenges. We look to the comments of readers to help us in our editing process for future editions. The two sections that constitute Women Writers in the United States are meant to be read together, and, demonstrating that the division between women's writing and its context is often blurry, arbitrary, even vexed, many women appear on both sides of the page. Margaret Sanger, for example, is well known for her work in making birth control available and in educating the public about it; some of this important social work she did through published writing. Zitkala-Sa (also known as Gertrude Bonnin), president of the National Council of American Indians, published stories in the Atlantic Monthly and a collection entitled American Indian Stories (1921). This collection educates readers about the displacement she and other Native Americans experienced as children when they were taken from their natural parents and sent to schools where they were not allowed to maintain their cultural customs. Zitkala-Sa's work, recorded here in both "Texts" and "Contexts," testifies to her lifelong struggle to fight such wrongs. One of our hardest tasks has been to decide within which "category" certain data best fit: Do we consider the meeting of Alice B. Toklas and Gertrude Stein, for example, a literary event or a social event? A meeting between two people would appear to be a social event, but it is also decidedly literary in that The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1932) would not have been written without it. To take another example: Was the 1901 bestowal of a Doctorate of Letters by Bowdoin College on Sarah Orne Jewett a literary milestone or a social milestone? How about the founding of Peterson's Maga-
+ xv
xvi $• Introduction
zine? It was certainly an event important to women who would subsequently publish their writing in the journal, but does it constitute an event that can be classified under the rubric women's writing? Wrestling with such determinations has challenged our own thinking about what counts as "literature" and what as "context" or "history"; we would like to think that it will do the same for our readers. Although due to demands of form we have imposed what is without doubt an artificial binary structure on our data, the juxtaposition of the two chronologies demonstrates that works —be they literary, social, professional, private, charitable, activist, profit-oriented, or artistic—do not occur in a vacuum. Taken as a whole, Women Writers in the United States should demonstrate that women's work and works inform each other in specific and illuminating ways. In 1776, Abigail Adams's plea to her husband to "remember the ladies" when framing this country's constitution fell on deaf ears. Responding to Adams's plea some 200 years after it was made, we hope this account of the multiple ways in which women's works and words have made a difference in this country will insure that not simply the "ladies" but all the actors — across races, genders, age groups, creeds, and religions —who have played a role in advancing U.S. women's social position will not only be remembered but cited and celebrated.
WOMEN WRITERS IN THE UNITED S T A T E S
AUTHORS' NOTE
Author entries are arranged alphabetically within years. Authors are identified in their first entry by their birth and death dates as well as by the types of writing they do. When we felt it added clarity, we have added racial and ethnic heritage or regional affiliation. Subsequent entries generally focus only on the work(s) published in that particular year. Diaries and journals are typically listed according to the date of the writing, rather than the date of publication. Unless otherwise noted, dates are first known U.S. publication. We have included birth and death dates for authors and artists only, when available. We have not provided dates for the living.
TEXTS
CONTEXTS
U.S. Women Writing
Social, Political, and Arts History
Xativc American women of many tribes participated in storytelling, creating and continuing oral traditions that explained the creation and nature of the world; recorded their tribal and personal histories; taught skills, values, and beliefs; and provided humor and entertainment.
More than 11,600 years ago, a woman lived and died in what is now Midland, Texas. Her bones were unearthed in 1992.
1 A. ix-1300
1 A. ix-1300
The Anasazi inhabit the Four Corners region (Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico's conjoining borders) of what is now the United States. As it was an advanced civilization, anthropologists are still uncertain as to the reasons behind its virtual disappearance from the face of the earth.
1492
1492
Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain finance the first voyage of Christopher Columbus to search for the Indies. An estimated 900,000 to 1,000,000 Native Americans live on what is now known as the North American continent.
3
4 $ Women Writers m the United states
TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1492-1770
1492-1770
More Africans arrive in America than Europeans.
1493
1493
Papal bull divides the "New World" between Portugal and Spain.
1526
1526
Spanish explorers land in South Carolina, bringing black slaves who flee for the interior. Many marry Native Americans.
1539
1539
The first printing press in the Americas is set up in Mexico City.
1565
1565
The first permanent European settlement in North America, St. Augustine, is founded by Spain in Florida.
1587
1587
Virginia Dare becomes the first child ol English parents to be born on American soil; her parents are members of the Roanoke colony on Roanoke Island off North Carolina. By 1591, these colonists have mysteriously disappeared.
1600
1600
200 contraceptive and abortion methods, both medicinal and mechanical in nature, are in common use.
Women Writers in the United States * 5 TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1606
1606
The Virginia Company of London, granted a royal charter, sends 120 colonists to Virginia.
1607
1607
Jamestown is founded, the first English settlement on the American mainland; its first women— Mistress Forrest and her maid, Anne Burras —arrive in 1608. As an act of mercy or as part of a tribal adoption ritual, Pocahontas saves Captain John Smith from death; she mediates between the colonists and her people for several years.
1609
1609
The first known wedding between colonists is held in Virginia when Anne Burras marries John Laydon.
1613
1613
English colonists in Virginia destroy the French settlement at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, and prevent Erench colonization of Maryland.
1614
1614
Pocahontas marries John Rolfe, a European immigrant; they have a son. She assumes the name Rebecca and dies in England a few years later.
6 * Women Writers m the United States TEXTS 1619
CONTEXTS 1619
The first African women — three of twenty captives — arrive in Jamestown, Virginia, as indentured servants. The first representative colonial assembly in America is held at Jamestown, Virginia. The House of Burgesses petitions the London company to grant equal lots of land to wives as to husbands in the colonies, claiming that in the new territories they could not be sure as yet whether women or men would be more necessaty; the petition is granted.
1620
1620
Pilgrims land in Provincetown on Cape Cod and a month later locate Plymouth Harbor; Mary Chilton is the first European to step onto Plymouth Rock. While more than half the Pilgrims die from winter and illness by the following year, the survivors celebrate the help they received from Native Americans with the first "thanksgiving" feast. The first library opens in Virginia. In Jamestown, a planter must pay 150 pounds of
Women Writers in the United States * 7 TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1620
1620
tobacco to marry one of 140 unmarried women sent by the London Company.
1624
1624
The first known African American child is born in the colonies: William, son of Anthony and Isabel Tucker, a free black couple in Virginia.
1626
1626
Peter Minuit, of the Dutch West Indies Company, purchases the entire island of Manhattan from a Native American chief, for trinkets valued at 60 guilders ($24).
1630
1630
Boston is founded by approximately 1000 settlers led by John Winthrop; this year marks the beginning of the decade-long "Great Migration" of some 10,000 to 24,500 English Puritans fleeing religious persecution.
1636
1636
The country's first college, Harvard, is established.
1637
1637
The Pequot War is fought between Native Americans and colonists in Massachusetts. Anne Hutchinson, leader of the opposition in the anti-authority crisis, is tried and found guilty for
8 t Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1637
1637
behavior "not fitting for her sex" in challenging clergymen; she is banished from Massachusetts.
1639
1639
Mary Mandame is convicted of a "dallyance" with a Native American in Plymouth, Massachusetts; after being whipped, she is sentenced to wear a badge of shame 011 her sleeve, the first woman so sentenced in the colonies.
1640
1640
Ann Hibbens is tried by the church as a "contentious woman" for disputing the quality and price of work done by town carpenters. The first press in the colonies (Cambridge, Massachusetts) prints its first book, the Bay Psalm Book.
1641
1641
Massachusetts becomes the first colony to recognize slavery as legal.
1642
1642
English Civil War begins. The first tavern opens in Manhattan.
1643
1643
Antinomian Anne Hutchinson and all but one of her children are murdered by Indians in New Netherlands, where she had
Women Writers in the United States + 9 TEXTS 1643
1643
1645
CONTEXTS
Anne Hopkins, wife of the Governor of Hartford, is taken to Boston for medical help for having "written many books" and lost her wits "by occasion of her giving herself wholly to reading and writing."
settled after her banishment from Massachusetts in 1637.
1645
1647
1647
The first known colonial book-seller, Hezekiah Usher ol Boston, adds books to his general merchandise.
1648
1648
The first "witch" — a woman —to be executed in the Massachusetts Bay Colony is midwife and lay healer Margaret Jones.
1649
1649
King Charles I is beheaded; England is declared a Commonwealth under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell. Goodwife Norman and Mary Hammon of the Massachusetts Bay Colony are the first women tried for lesbianism; Norman is found guilty and Hammon acquitted.
1650
Anne Dudley Bradstreet (1612P-1672): The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in
1650
10 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1650
1655
America, the first collection of verse produced in the "New World" and one of the most salable volumes in 17th-century London. She produced this and her other two volumes while, in the words of Adrienne Rich, "rearing eight children, lying frequently sick, keeping house at the edge of the wilderness."
1650
1655
Illiteracy among women is about 50 percent. Deborah Moody, the first woman to receive a land grant and to run a colonial settlement, is also the first woman to cast a vote, a right she earns as a landowner.
1656
1656
The first all-woman jury in the colonies (Patuxent, Maryland) assembles to hear evidence against Judith Catchpole, accused of murdering her child. Judith claims she has never even been pregnant. The jury acquits her. When the first Quaker women, Mary Fisher and Ann Austin, arrive in the Massachusetts colony, authorities imprison, then banish them.
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1656
1656
Ann Hibbens is accused of witchcraft and executed.
1660s
1660s
Early colonial statutes impose stricter penalties on fornication between blacks and whites than between whites.
1660
1660
Charles II returns to England; his coronation occurs the following year. Mary Dyer, a Quaker, is hanged in Boston for her "unorthodox" beliefs.
1662
Virginia passes a law declaring that the status of the child follows the condition of the mother, slave or free.
1664
Maryland bans marriages between English women and African American men.
1667
1667
The "Massachusetts Queen," a squaw-sachem who governed the Massachusetts Confederacy from before 1620, dies, ending her long reign.
1675-1676
1675-1676
King Philip's War is fought between Indian tribes and Plymouth colonists.
1662
1664
Anne Dudley Bradstreet: Meditations Divine and Moral.
72 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1676
1676
1681
Sarah Goodhue (16411681): Valedictory and Monitory Writing.
1681
1682
Mary Rowlandson (16361678): Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson. After having been held captive by members of the Algonquin tribe, Rowlandson documented her surprise at her own ability to endure and adapt, as well as her shifting attitude toward her captors, writing that "not one of them ever offered me the least abuse of unchastity to me, in word or action."
1682
Mary Rowlandson becomes the first woman captive released by Native Americans.
1683
1683
The first German immigrants arrive in America.
1685
1685
Philadelphia gets its first press. Boston constructs its first almshouse.
1688
1688
Quakers in Pennsylvania pass the first antislavery resolution in the colonies. Advice to a Daughter, by George Savile, Marquis of Halifax, one of the first
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1688
1688
etiquette texts, is published: it greatly influenees American women writers of that genre.
1690
1690
Estimated colonial population: 213,500. Publick Occurrences is the first newspaper to appear in the colonies; it is stopped by the government of Massachusetts after four days.
1691
1691
The Virginia legislature outlaws interracial union and banishes from the colony any white man or woman who marries or fornicates with a "Negro, mulatto, or Indian."
1692
1692
Bridget Bishop is the first person hanged in Salem for alleged witchcraft.
1692-1693
1692-1693
The Salem Witch Trials: 19 Salem residents, almost all women, are found guilty of witchcraft and executed. A West Indian slave named Tituba is said to have influenced the other accused witches. Hundreds of "witches" await trial or execution by the time the new English governor dismisses the court and frees the prisoners.
14 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1693
1693
The College of William and Mary is founded in Wllliamsburg, Virginia.
1695
1695
New York gets its first press.
1697
1697
Hannah Duston of Massachusetts lulls and scalps ten Native Americans and is publicly rewarded £25 for doing so. Her weekold baby had been killed previously by a band of Native Americans.
1700
1700
The total slave population numbers around 28,000, with 23,000 living in the South.
1701
The first sexually integrated jury, made up of six men and women, hears a case in Albany, New York; it is not until well into the 20th century that this becomes a common practice.
1704
1704
The first underground sewer is used in Boston.
1704-1706
1704-1706
The Boston News-Letter is the first official newspaper.
1705
1705
Colonial Virginia passes a law classifying slaves as real estate; similar laws are enacted in Kentucky (1798) and the Louisiana Territory (1806).
701
Sarah Fiske (1652-1692), American spiritual autobiographer: A Confession of Faith; or, A Summary of Divinity (published posthumously, originally written 1677).
Women Writers in the United States * 15 TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1707
Elizabeth Bradford (1663?-1731), poet, along with husband William, writes prefatory poems for an edition of Benjamin Keach's War with the Devil.
1707
1709
Bathsheba Bowers (1612?-\1\%): An alarm sounded to prepare the inhabitants of the world to meet the Lord in the way of his judgments, a detailed autobiographical account of Bowers's painful search for understanding and peace with God.
1709
1710
1710
Henrietta Johnson, who emigrated from Ireland with her husband a few years previously, is providing much of the support for her extended family with proceeds from her efforts at pastel portraiture. Her small, single-figured portraits are greatly valued today, both for their historical significance and their aesthetic charm.
1711
1711
The hoop for hoop skirts is invented.
1712
1712
Slaves revolt in New York; on account of the death of nine whites, 21 blacks are executed and six others kill themselves.
16 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
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1714
1714
Tea is introduced to the colonies, but chocolate continues to he the favorite non-alcoholic drink.
1715
1715
Sybilla Masters, the first female inventor born in the newly settled colonies, invents a machine to prepare Indian corn.
1716
1716
The first colonial theater opens in Williamsburg, Virginia.
1718
1718
New Orleans is established by the Mississippi Company. The General Assembly of Pennsylvania gives wives of mariners or deserted wives the right to operate businesses in their own names. Massachusetts resident Mary Butterworth successfully counterfeits paper money through a clever cloth-copying process.
1721
1721
The first independent American newspaper is the New England Courant. Rifles are introduced into America.
1725
1725
The first New York newspaper is the New York Gazette.
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1727
1727
Quakers in the United States call for the abolition of slavery. George II succeeds his father George I on the throne of England.
1730s
1730s
The first drawings of the female skeleton appear in Europe.
1730
1730
Estimated colonial population numbers 654,900, about 90,000 of whom are slaves.
1731
1731
The first subscription library is founded, in Philadelphia.
1732
1732
Benjamin Franklin begins annual publication of Poor Richard's Almanac; it stops in 1757.
1733
A group of "she merchants" in New York City place a public notice in a newspaper arguing that since they too pay taxes and hence support the government, they should be entitled to some of its sweets.
1734
The religious revival known as the Great Awakening begins in New England; it lasts at least until the early 1740s.
1733
1734
Mercy Wheeler (17061796): An Address to Young People; Or, ... Warning from the Death.
18
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1734
The first horse race is run in America.
1735
The first opera produced in the colonies premieres in Charleston, South Carolina.
1738
1738
Elizabeth Timothy becomes the first woman to publish a newspaper, the South Carolina Gazette.
1739
1739
Bloody slave revolts break out in South Carolina.
1740
1740
Benjamin Franklin invents his stove.
1741
Eliza Lucas Pinckney, who successfully serves as business manager for several of her family's plantations and conducts a series of agricultural experiments, introduces her most successful discovery—indigo—to South Carolina, thereby creating a dyestuffs industry.
1734
1735
1741
Jane Colman Turell (] 708-1735): Reliquiae Turellae et Lachrymae Paternal, includes correspondence, diary extracts, short religious essays, and verse; reprinted in 1741 as Memoirs of the Life and Death of the Pious and Ingenious Mrs. Jane Turell.
Elizabeth White (1637?1699): The Experiences of God's Gracious Dealing -with Mrs. Elizabeth White.
The first magazine in the colonies is Andrew Bradford's American Magazine; its appearance is followed three days later by
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1741
1741
1742
Sarah Parson Moorhead, religious polemicist and poet: "To the Reverend James Davenport on His Departure from Boston by Way of a Dream."
1742
1743
Sarah Prince Gill (17281771), a Puritan, begins keeping a diary at age 15, which she continues through most of her life, writing on such subjects as her love of books and the recurring need she feels to recommit herself to God. Parts of the diary, a verse, and a letter are published in 1773 as Devotional Papers.
1743
1745
1746
1745
Lucy Terry (1730-1821), author of "Bars Fight, August 28, 1746," is the first known African American poet in the United States. Handed down orally for a century, the ballad is first printed in 1855. Enslaved at age five, Terry married in 1756 a free black man who purchased her freedom.
1746
Benjamin Franklin's General Magazine, both Philadelphia journals.
Pennsylvanian Christine Zeller uses an ax against attacking Native Americans, killing three.
20 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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Sophia Hume (17021774), Quaker religious writer: An Exhortation to the Inhabitants of the Province of South Carolina.
1748
1750
1750
Slave population numbers 236,400; 206,000 live south of Pennsylvania; slaves now represent about 20 percent of the colonial population. The first playhouse opens in New York.
1.754
1754
1754-1757
As do many colonial women, Esther Edwards Burr (1732-1758) keeps a diary; it is published in 1984.
1754-1760 1755
Sarah Osborn (17141796): The Nature, Certainty, and Evidence of True Christianity, spiritual autobiography.
Margaret Green Draper (1727-1807), one of the most successful 18thcentury female printers and a staunch loyalist, publishes the Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News-Letter from 1754 to 1776, when she evacuates with the British army.
1754-1757
1754-1760
Erench and Indian War.
1755
"Yankee Doodle" is a popular song, originating as a British satire of the colonists but later taken up by the Yankees as a favorite marching song during the Revolutionary War.
Women Writers in the United States * 21 TEXTS 1756
CONTEXTS 1756
1757
Martha Wadsworth Brewster: Poems on Divers Subjects, includes acrostics, eulogies, epithalamiums, verse letters, scriptural paraphrases, a love poem, a quaternion, verse prayer, and occasional pieces.
1757
1758
Elizabeth Sandwich Drinker (1734-1807) keeps a continuous journal from 1758 to 1787, giving an intimate view of a prosperous Quaker family in colonial Philadelphia. In 1937, selections from the 36 volumes are edited and published by her great-grandson as Not So Long Ago.
1758
Annis Boudinot Stockton (1736-1801), poet and sponsor of literary salons: Her first known publication, "To the Honorable Colonel Peter Schuyler," appears in New-York Mercury and in New American Magazine; at least 21 of her poems would appear in notable periodicals during her lifetime.
Mrs. Josiah Taft becomes the first known woman to have her vote recorded when she votes in favor of a town tax.
22 $ Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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Barbara Heck establishes Methodism in the colonies and applies her efforts to having the first Methodist church built.
1762
1762
The first woman newspaper editor, Ann Franklin (sister of Benjamin), begins work at the Mercury in Newport, Rhode Island.
1763
1763
By this date, all 13 colonies have printing presses.
1764
1764
In Davey v. Turner, the Supreme Court in colonial Pennsylvania rules on the status of married women's property rights and requires the feme coven's (married woman's) consent before her property can be sold or transferred.
1765
1765
In Massachusetts, Jenny Slew, an African American, sues for and wins her freedom.
1760
Jean Lowry: A Journal of the Captivity of Jean Lowry and Her Children, Giving an Account of Her Being Taken by Indians, the 1st of April 1156, from William McCords in Rocky Spring Settlement in Pennsylvania. Anna Steele (17171778?), poet: Poems on Subjects Chiefly Devotional, two volumes published under the pseudonym "Theodosia." She donates the proceeds to charity.
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1768
Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson (1737-1801), poet and hostess of literary salons, known for her vers de societe and her letters and accounts of travels, usually signed "Laura": "The Dream of the Patriotic Philosophical Farmer," a political verse arguing for an American embargo on British goods.
1768
Encyclopedia Britannica is founded.
1769
American printers stop relying on England for their presses and begin producing and purchasing them domestically.
Milcah Martha Moore (1740-1829), poet, anthologist, and teacher: "The Female Patriots. Address'd to the Daughters of Liberty in America, 1768," verse.
1769
The first known interior "water closet" is built. 1770s
1770
Abigail Adams (17441818) authors hundreds of letters to family and friends which provide a multidimensional and warmly human picture of life in her times.
1770s
1770
Boston Massacre.
24 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1770
1771
Jane Dunlap, American poet from Boston: Poems upon Several Sermons Preached by the Rev'd George Whitefield.
1770
A hairstyle once popular in 1710 is adopted by wealthy colonial women: "the Tower," for which hair is piled high on the head, greased, and decked with all kinds of paraphernalia.
1771
The umbrella as protection against the sun is first introduced to the colonies in Philadelphia and is ridiculed as effeminate.
1772
A British judge orders slavery abolished in England and the freeing of all the nation's slaves; in 1807 the slave trade is outlawed in Britain, and in 1834 slavery is abolished in the British Empire, including the West Indies.
Anna Green Winslow (1759-1780) keeps a diary of her experiences at school in Boston; it is published as the Diary of Anna Green Winslow: A Boston School Girl of 7777 in 1895.
1772
The Adulateur, the first propaganda play by America's first female playwright, Mercy Otis Warren (1728-1814), is first performed.
Patience Lovell Wright (1725-1786), the first known U.S. woman sculptor, travels to London and exhibits some of her lifesize portraits in wax. During the Revolutionary War, Wright reportedly provides to the Americans
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1772
1773
Bridget Richardson Fletcher (1726-1770), American hymn writer: Hymns and Spiritual Songs.
25
CONTEXTS 1772
information she gained while sculpting wellknown Englishmen.
1773
Boston Tea Party. The Philadelphia Museum opens.
PhillisWheatley(1753?1784): Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, first book of poems published by a black American.
1774
Elizabeth Sampson Ashbridge (1713-1755), Quaker preacher and autobiographer: Some Account of the Fore-Pan of the Life of Elizabeth Asbbridge, written in 1746 as an account of her spiritual development.
1774
1774-1776
Janet Schaw, travel writer: Journal of a Lady of Quality.
1774-1776
1775
Anna Young Smith (1756-1780?), poet and protegee of Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson: "An Elegy to the Memory of the American Volunteers," the first of her poems to be published, appears in the Pennsylvania Magazine. She uses the pseudonym "Sylvia."
1775
Nancy Ward is the first known white woman to sit on a Native American Council. She is given this honor by the Cherokee for her bravery during a battle against the Creek.
26 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1775
Mercy Otis Warren, playwright, poet, historian: The Group: A Farce.
1775
1775-1783
1775-1783
The American Revolution: perhaps the most famous woman associated with the battlefield is known by the sobriquet "Molly Pitcher," a nickname given Mary Ludwig after she carries water to American troops; other possible candidates for this legendary nickname include Margaret Corbin, wounded and disabled for life in a battle against the British in 1776, and Mary Hays, who fought in an artillery battle in 1778. Corbin is the first American woman to receive a war pension for her disability.
1776
1776
The Declaration of Independence is signed. Mary Goddard, who, in addition to serving as postmaster of Baltimore, had turned her husband's failed printing business into a success, becomes the first publisher to print the Declaration of Independence. Abigail Adams advises her husband, John, to "Remember the Ladies" when
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CONTEXTS 1776
1776
drafting the new government's laws or women might "foment a Rebellion." New Jersey grants suffrage to women, making it the first colony to do so, although it repeals the right in 1807. A New York barmaid, Betsy Flanagan, invents the first cocktail.
17"
Phillis Wheatley: "On the Death of General Wooster."
1777
Betsy Ross is commissioned to sew a stars-andstripes flag after a congressional resolution declares it the national emblem. A group of anonymous slaves petition the Massachusetts Bay Colony's House for their freedom.
1779
Susannah Johnson Hastings (1730-1810), autobiographer: The Captive American.
1780s
1780
Esther de Berdt Reed (1747-1780): The Sentiments of an American Woman.
1779
Dr. William Alexander writes a history of women which suggests that women's arts have been devalued for the simple reason that it is men who write history.
1780s
Many married couples practice some form of contraception, including coitus interruptus and prolonged breastfeeding.
1780
Pennsylvania enacts a law aiming for the gradual abolition of slavery, the first state to do so.
28 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
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1780
1780
Ann Lee, leader of the Shaker religious sect (which she established in 1774), becomes the first conscientious objector; she is imprisoned for her public opposition to the war.
1781
1781
The Articles of Confederation go into effect. Elizabeth Freeman (Mumbet), a slave woman who would go on to be largely responsible for rearing author Catharine Maria Sedgwick, successfully sues in county court for her freedom with the legal help of Theodore Sedgwick, father of Catharine. Her challenge establishes a precedent for the abolition of slavery throughout Massachusetts. Sedgwick would later write of Freeman's example in "Slavery in New England," published in Bentley 's Miscellany in 1853.
1782
1782
Deborah (Gannett) Sampson, who some historians believe was African American, enlists in the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment in the American Revolutionary War under the alias Robert Shutleff (or Shirtliff). She fights in
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1782
29
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1782
several battles before her sex is discovered during treatment for fever in a Philadelphia hospital. New England discontinues its use of the scarlet letter for adulterers.
1783
1783
Statutes are passed outlawing "crimes against nature" (including sodomy and fellatio). The first daily newspaper is the Pennsylvania Evening Post. The Eederalist papers first appear in a New York newspaper, the Independen t Journal (1783 — 1840).
1783-1784
Elizabeth House Trist keeps a journal of her travels from Philadelphia to Natchez; in it she records her sense of awe at the vastness of the wilderness.
1783-1784
1784
Hannah Adams (17551831), probably the first professional woman writer in the U.S., researcher and historian: Alphabetical Compendium of the Various Sects Which Have Appeared from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Present Day.
1784
30 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1784
Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820), poet, essayist, playwright, and feminist: "Desultory Thoughts upon the utility of encouraging a degree of SelfComplacency, especially in FEMALE BOSOMS."
1784
1785
1785
Alexander Hamilton and John Jay start a New York-based "Society for the Promotion of the Manumission of Slaves and Protecting such of them that have been or may be limited."
1786-1787
1786-1787
Shays's Rebellion: some 1200 Massachusetts farmers led by Daniel Shays protest strict foreclosure laws and heavy taxes before they are put down by federal troops.
1787
Dollar currency is introduced in the U.S.
1787
Frances Hornby Barkley begins keeping diaries of her travels with her husband, a captain exploring the Northwest coast; it is the only pre-Lewis and Clark expedition narrative by a woman that has been found.
In New York, the first African Free School is founded. Congress bans slavery from the Northwest Territory. In the first issue of his American Magazine, Noah Webster proclaims, "The expectation of failure is
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CONTEXTS
1787
1787
connected with the very name of a Magazine," and he is right: of the 71 magazines begun in the last 15 years of the 18th century, 15 lasted for more than two years and only seven for more than five. Webster's magazine was not among these latter, as it folded in 1788.
1787-1792
1787-1792
One of the few successful magazines of the 18th century, American Museum, begins publication.
1788
The U.S. Constitution goes into effect but grants such basic rights as suffrage to white propertied males only.
1788
Susanna Rowson (1762— 1824), novelist, playwright, poet, lyricist, and educator: Poems on Various Subjects.
New York is declared the U.S. capital.
Mercy Otis Warren: Observations on the New Constitution, and on the Federal and State Conventions. 1789
1789
George Washington becomes the first President of the United States of America. The French Revolution begins. The first juvenile magazine, Children's Magazine, appears in Hartford, Connecticut; only three issues are printed.
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1789
1789
Pennsylvania repeals its law prohibiting the performance of plays.
1790s
1790s
The average age of marriage for white women is 27; 100 years later it is 22.
1790
Philadelphia becomes the U.S. capital.
1790
Sarah Wentworth Morton (1759-1846), poet: Ouabi; or, The Virtues of Nature: An Indian Tale in Four Cantos, poetry published under the name "Philenia, a Lady of Boston." Morton was called the American Sappho in her time. Judith Sargent Murray: "On the Equality of the Sexes." Mercy Otis Warren: Poems, Dramatic and Miscellaneous.
Washington, D.C., is founded. The first U.S. census: U.S. Africans are the second largest segment of the total U.S. population of 3,929,000. African American population equals 757,181; 91 percent are slaves. The first Naturalization Law excludes all but free white immigrants from citizenship; the "white" qualification is not officially stricken from the statute books until the McCarran Act of 1952. The first U.S. patent law enables printers and authors to protect their copyright. The first musical competition in America is held.
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1790
1791
Margaretta V. Faugeres (1771-1801), playwright, poet, essayist, and editor of the works of her mother, Ann Eliza Bleecker: "A Salute to the Fourteenth Anniversary of American Independence."
CONTEXTS
1790
High heels go out of fashion and sandal-like footwear comes into style.
1791
Toussaint L'Ouverture leads a slave insurrection in Haiti. The Bill of Rights is signed.
Jenny Fenno (1765?-?), poet and religious writer: Occasional Compositions in Prose and Verse. Sarah Porter (P-1831), poet: The Royal Penitent, in Three Parts, to Which Is Added David's Lamentation over Saul and Jonathan. Susanna Rowson: Charlotte Temple: A Tale of Truth first appears in London. By 1794, when published in the U.S., its sales will make Rowson the country's first best-selling novelist. Eunice Smith, religious writer: Some Arguments Against WorldlyMindedness.
1792
Anna Beeman (1739?-?), American hymn writer and religious polemicist:
1792
Catherine Littlefield Greene hosts Eli Whitney in her home for six
34 + Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1792
Hymns on Various Subjects deals with God's boundless love and man's responsibility to prepare himself for grace.
CONTEXTS 1792
Eunice Smith: Practical Language Interpreted.
months, supporting him while he designs the idea she is said to have suggested to him: the cotton gin. Two political parties are formed in the U.S.: the Whig under Thomas Jefferson and the Federalist under Alexander Hamilton and John Adams. In England, Mary Wollstonecraft(17591797) publishes A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
1793
Ann Eliza Bleecker (1752-1783), poet, shortstory writer, and correspondent: The Posthumous Works of Ann Eliza Bleecker, which traces the heavy personal toll of the American Revolution.
1793
The "Reign of Terror" in France begins. U.S. proclaims its neutrality in world affairs. The first fugitive slave law is enacted. Mrs. Samuel Slater becomes the first U.S. woman to be granted a patent: she receives it for cotton sewing thread.
1794
Susanna Rowson: Slaves in Algiers; or, A Struggle for Freedom, a play; and "America, Commerce and Freedom," a drinking song.
1794
Elizabeth Hog Bennett's husband operates on her and she thus becomes the first woman to undergo the first successful Cesarean section in the U.S.
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Lucy Allen publishes 26 hymns. The author is described as a devout Baptist who could neither read nor write but was moved to compose verse by "accidents, and other occurrences" of her life in the mid-1780s, including the death of her daughter.
CONTEXTS
1795
Sarah Waldrake and Rachael Summers become the first female federal government employees when they begin work at the Philadelphia mint.
1796
John Adams is elected President.
Margaretta V. Faugeres: Belisarius: A Tragedy. 1796
Judith Sargent Murray: The Traveller Returned, a play.
Statute laws first introduce the concept of "Indian country," the idea that Native Americans could have land legally belong to them.
Amelie Simmons: American Cookery.
1797
Ann Eliza Bleecker: The History of Maria Kittle, an epistolary novel, possibly the first fictional captivity narrative (published posthumously). Hannah Webster Foster (1758-1840), novelist and conduct book author: The Coquette; or, the History of Eliza Wharton, highly successful and influential anonymously published epistolary novel. Sarah Wentworth Morton: Beacon Rill, poetry
1797
Escaped slaves petition Congress for "our relief as a people"; Congress rejects the petition. Author and playwright Susannah Rowson leaves the theater and opens an academy for young ladies, which she operates until her retirement in 1822. Nathaniel Briggs's design for the washing machine is patented.
36 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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published under the name "Philenia."
1797
1798
Hannah Webster Foster: The Boarding School; or, Lessons of a Preceptress to Her Pupils.
1798
Judith Sargent Murray: The Gleaner, a 3-volume collection of her writings. Susanna Rowson: Reuben and Rachel, a novel. 1799
Memoirs of the Life of Mrs. Sarah Osborn, who Died At Newport, Rhode Island, on the Second Day of August, 1796. In the Eighty Third Year of Her Age, Samuel Hopkins, ed.
1799
Tabitha Tenney (17621820), novelist and advice writer: The Pleasing Instructor, an advice manual and anthology of classical literature. 1800
Sally Barrell Keating Wood (1759-1855), among the first to publish more than one novel in the U.S.: Julia, and the Illuminated Baron.
1800
An average of 7.04 children are born to each American woman. Abortion is legal in every state. The Library of Congress is established.
1801
Tabitha Tenney: Female Quixotism: Exhibited in
1801
Thomas Jefferson becomes President.
Women Writers in the United States * 37 TEXTS 1801
the Romantic Opinions and Extravagant Adventures ofDorcasina Sheldon, a satirical novel.
CONTEXTS 1801
Sally Wood: Dorval; or, The Spectacular, a novel.
One of the most successful and popular magazines of the nation's early years, the weekly Port Folio, begins publication and stays in print until 1827; its and editor, Jo-founder seph Dennie, uses the periodical as a forum for his Federalist views. Alexander Hamilton founds the New York Evening Post; it is edited from 1829 to 1878 by poet William Cullen Bryant.
1802
Sally Wood: Amelia; or The Influence of Virtue, a novel.
1802
The first official hotel opens in America in Sarato a g , New York. The American Company of Booksellers is organized.
1803
Sukey Vickery (17991821), novelist and poet: Emily Hamilton, an epistolary novel.
1803
The Louisiana Purchase, land acquired at approximately four cents an acre, doubles the size of the nation. The first ice box used in an individual home appears. Writer Charles Brockden Brown begins publishing his Literary Magazine and American Register; it folds in 1807.
38 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1804
Susanna Rowson: Miscellaneous Poems.
1804
The first regular book trade catalog, The Catalogue of All the Books Printed in the United States, is issued in Boston.
1804-1806
Shoshone woman Sacajawea acts as guide and interpreter for the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Sally Wood: Ferdinand and Elmira, a Russian Story, a novel.
1804-1806
1805
Mercy Otis Warren: History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution, Interspersed with Biographical and Moral Observations.
1806
1806
1807
1805
Hannah Adams: The Abridgement of the History of New England for the Use of Young People.
Georgia and Louisiana pass laws sentencing to death slaves who rape white women (as do Kentucky in 1811, Mississippi in 1814, Tennessee in 1833, Texas in 1837, and South Carolina in 1843).
1807
Sara Pogson: The Female Enthusiast, a play.
1808
1808
The external slave trade is abolished in the U.S.; however, the number of U.S. slaves triples between 1790 and 1860.
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1808
1808
James Madison becomes President.
1809
1809
The first religious order founded in the U.S., Sisters of St. Joseph, is established by Elizabeth Bayley Seton. Mary Kies becomes one of the earliest U.S. women to earn a patent, for her method of weaving straw into silk and thread for bonnets. Without the benefit of anesthesia, Jane T odd Crawford survives the very first operation to remove an ovarian tumor.
1812
The War of 1812 begins; Lucy Brewer, disguised as "George Baker," enlists as the first woman marine.
1813
1813
The stereotype is introduced; it enables printers to produce multiple copies of a text simultaneously and helps to make possible the mass marketing of books as well as the "best-seller."
1814
1814
Emma Hart Willard opens the Middlebuty Female Seminary, a girls' boarding school.
1812
Hannah Adams: History of the Jews from the Destruction of Jerusalem to the Nineteenth Century. Rebecca Rush (1779-?): Kelroy, A Novel.
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The first steam-driven "double-press" is introduced at the Times in London. The publishing house of John Wiley & Sons opens; it focuses almost exclusively on English and European works for its first five years.
1815
Mary Carr Clarke: The Fair Americans, a play.
1815
Hannah Mather Crocker (1752-1829), memoirist, poet, and polemicist: A Series of Letters on Free Masonry by a Woman of Boston.
Pennsylvania expands its grounds for divorce to inelude impotence; Michigan does so in 1832. North American Review is founded; it remains a leading review periodical until it folds in 1840.
Lydia Sigourney (17911865), poet, novelist, advocate of higher education for women, known as the "Sweet Singer of Hartford": Moral Pieces in Prose and Verse. 1816
Hannah Mather Crocker: The School of Reform or the Seaman's Safe Pilot to the Cape of Good Hope. Nancy Maria Hyde: The Writings of Nancy Maria Hyde, of Norwich, Conn., Connected with a Sketch of Her Life.
Napoleon is defeated at the Battle of Waterloo.
1816
James Monroe becomes President. The African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church is established.
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1817
Isabella Marshall Graham (1742-1814), religious writer: The Power of Faith, Exemplified in the Life and Writings of the Late Mrs. Isabella Graham of New York, published posthumously by her daughter Joanna Graham Bethune, with an accompanying biography.
1817
The American Colonization Society is founded, with the aim of sending all African Americans living in the U.S. to colonies in Africa and elsewhere. The publishing company Harper & Bros, is first established as J & J Harper, a small printing firm that soon becomes one of the major publishing houses in U.S. history, famous especially in the 19th century for its series of books known as "libraries": Harper's Family Library, Library of Select Novels, Boys' and Girls' Library, and Classical Library. Miniaturist Ann Hall's (1792-1863) works are exhibited in New York City; Hall later becomes the first woman to be a full member of the National Academy of Design.
1818
Hannah Mather Crocker: Observations on the Real Rights of Women with their appropriate duties, agreeable to Scripture, reason, and common sense.
1818
The barrier between Canada and the U.S. (the 49th parallel) is agreed upon. Thin, low-cut, and closefitting muslin dresses are the fashion. The Seminole War begins in Florida.
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1819
Emma Hart Willard (1787-1870), poet, author of textbooks, advice books, and histories, educator: Plan for Improving Female Education, published at her own expense.
1819
Economic Depression.
1820
In accordance with the Missouri Compromise, Maine enters as a free state and Missouri enters as a slave state in 1821.
Frances Wright (17951852), feminist essayist and playwright: Altorf, a play.
1820
Maria Brooks (17941845), poet: Judith, Esther, and Other Poems, by a Lover of the Fine Arts.
U.S. population totals approximately 9.6 million. African American women number 870,860, 750,010 of whom are slaves; total African American population is 1,771,656. 512 newspapers are currently published in the colonies; 42 of these are dailies, which begin as a means of advertising the arrival of ships and the sale of imported goods but soon expand their function and format to approximate the dailies we read in the 1990s. Writing in the Edinburgh Review, Sydney Smith, ex-
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1820
1820
pressing a general belief in the paucity of American literature, asks, "In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?"
1821
1821
The American Colonization Society founds Liberia in order to provide a home for emancipated slaves other than in the U.S. The first issue of the Saturday Evening Post appears; it remains in print until 1969 and is revived in 1971. Emma Hart Willard founds the Troy Female Seminary, which is renamed for its founder in 1895.
1822
Sarah Wentworth Morton: My Mind and Its Thoughts. Catharine Maria Sedgwick (1789-1867), novelist, short-story writer, biographer: A New England Tale; or, Sketches of NewEngland Character and Manners, a novel.
1822
Denmark Vesey's conspiracy to kill all of Charleston, South Carolina's, whites is foiled, and Vesey and his aides are hanged. Samuel Thomson publishes the New Guide to American Health and founds a movement to democratize medicine, making every person his/her own healer. Zilpah Grant founds the Adams Academy for Girls
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1822
1822
(Deny, New Hampshire), the first school to award diplomas to females.
1823
1823
The Monroe Doctrine establishes the U.S. sense of Manifest Destiny over the Americas. Catharine Beecher opens the Hartford Seminary.
1824
Lydia Maria Child (18021880), novelist, shortstory writer, editor, biographer, advocate of Native American and African American rights: Hobomok, a Tale of Early Times, a historical novel.
1824
The first strike involving women takes place in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, when male and female weavers protest increasing hours and decreasing wages. The first public high school for girls opens in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Redwood, a novel. Margaret Bayard Smith (1778-1844), novelist, Washington socialite: A Winter in Washington, published anonymously. 1824-1825
1825
Lydia Maria Child: The Rebels; or, Boston before the Revolution, a novel. Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727), diarist, poet,
1824-1825
In a series for Blackwood's Magazine, John Neal makes the first known detailed attempt to describe and define "American literature."
1825
John Quincy Adams becomes President. Fanny Wright founds Nashoba, a Utopian community in western
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1825
and businesswoman: The Private Journal of a Journey from Boston to New York in the Year 1104 Kept by Madam Knight, a vivid picture of colonial life written during a horseback journey.
1825
Tennessee. Five years later she frees the Nashoba slaves after pronouncing the community a failure. Sarah Peale (1800-1885), considered one of the first American women painters, begins to advertise herself as having "painting rooms in Peale's Baltimore Museum." She is known for her portraits of many of the important figures in the young United States, and for still lifes, such as A Slice of Watermelon. Hannah Lord Montagu of New York invents a detachable shirt collar for men; her inspiration comes after growing tired of washing her husband's shirts when only the collar was dirty. The United Tailoresses Society of New York, the first women's labor organization, is formed; six years later it has over 600 members. The American Tract Society is founded as an avenue for evangelical comment. The first patent is taken out for tin cans.
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1825
1826
Lydia Maria Child founds the nation's first periodical for children, Juvenile Miscellany.
1825
Married couples have an average of five to six children.
1826
The lyceum program of adult education is first introduced in Massachusetts.
1827
Illinois passes a law setting the age of consent for marriage at 14 for women, 17 for men.
Anne Newport Royall (1769-1854), novelist, editor, travel writer: Sketches of History: Life and Manners in the United States by a Traveller. Jane Johnston Schoolcraft (1800-1841), an Ojibwa woman born Bame-wawas-ge-zhik-a-quay, with her husband Henry Schoolcraft begins a reading society at a frontier outpost; a magazine, "The Literary Voyager or Muzzenyegun," grows out of the effort. Jane Schoolcraft writes essays, poems, and sketches for the publication, which is grounded in Ojibwa culture.
1827
Sarah Josepha Buell Hale (1788-1879), novelist, biographer, and editor: Northwood: A Tale of New England, a novel. Eliza Leslie (1787-1858), short-story writer and author of children's literature, cookbooks, poetry, and etiquette manuals:
At a convention of the General Council of the Cherokee Nation, the delegates draft a constitution; however, an 1830 law passed by the Georgia
Women Writers in the United States * 47 TEXTS
1827
Seventy-five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats.
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1827
Elizabeth Ruffin, of Evergreen plantation in Virginia, keeps an ironic journal that records her view of plantation life.
Legislature (and upheld by the courts in 1831) abolishes Cherokee governmental authority, stripping the Nation of many of its rights and appropriating its land. Mardi Gras is first celebrated in New Orleans.
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Hope Leslie; or, Early Times in Massachusetts, a novel.
The first African American newspaper, Freedom's Journal, is printed in New York.
Lydia Sigourney: Poems.
The children's magazine Youth's Companion appears, intending to encourage "virtue and piety" in its young readers; it remains in print for 102 years. McClure's Magazine begins 100 years of publication. 1827-1828
Eliza Lee Pollen (17871867), abolitionist, editor of first American edition of Grimms' fairy tales and from 1843 to 1850 of the Child's Friend, a juvenile periodical, as well as prolific author of fiction for children: The Well-Spent Hour.
1827-1828
1828
Virginia Randolph Gary, southern author: Letters on Female Character, an advice book.
1828
The first labor strike by women only takes place when needleworkers in Dover, New Hampshire,
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1828
Lydia Maria Child: The First Settlers of NewEngland; or, Conquest of the Pequods, Narragansets and Pokanokets: as Related by a Mother to Her Children, and Designed for the Instruction of Youth.
1828
protest a wage cut as well as their ten-hour work day. Side-laced boots first become fashionable as women's footwear. Frances Wright is the first known woman to speak in public before both women and men.
Eliza Leslie: The Mirror, a work for children. Margaret Bayard Smith: What Is Gentility? A Moral Tale, an anonymously published novel. Catharine Read Arnold Williams (1790-1872), novelist, poet, biographer, and historian: Original Poems on Various Subjects.
1829
Catharine Beecher (18001878), writer and advocate of female educational reform: Suggestions Respecting Improvements in Education. Lydia Maria Child: The Frugal Housewife, an advice book. Lucretia Maria Davidson (1808-1825), poet: Amir Khan, and Other Poems, published posthumously, edited by her mother. Sarah Josepha Hale:
1829
Andrew Jackson becomes the seventh President. The first anthology of American literature appears: Samuel KettelFs 3volume Specimens of American Poetry, with Critical and Biographical Notes. The first carnival "Fat Ladies" in America are two sisters, Deborah and Susan Tripp; when Deborah was three and Susan was five, they weighed 124 and 205 pounds, respectively.
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1829
Sketches of American Character.
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1829
The first omnibus premieres in New York City.
1830s
Cookstoves, as distinct from heating stoves, come into their own in America.
1830
The average work week is 79 hours.
Frances Wright begins publication of The Free Enquirer, a newspaper dedicated to examining social, political, and religious issues. She publishes Course of Popular Lectures this same year. 1830s
1830
Frances Manwaring Caulkins (1795-1869) begins 30 years of writing for the American Tract Society, including religious and educational books for children. Sarah Josepha Hale: Poems for Our Children. Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Clarence; or, A Tale of Our Own Times.
Women's skirts become shorter, sleeves are enormous, hats are large and sport flowers and ribbons. Philadelphia becomes the first city to have a fully operative municipal water system, supplying running water to its citizens; New York develops one in 1842 and Boston in 1848. The Mormon Church is founded. Because of gradual emancipation in the North, the region is home to only 2,780 out of the 2,009,043 African American slaves.
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1830
1830
The Indian Removal Act enables President Andrew Jackson to forcibly remove Native American tribes from their homelands to designated (distant and dusty) "Indian Territory," now known as Oklahoma. Godey's Lady's Book is founded; it folds in 1898.
1830-1835
Catharine Read Williams: Tales, National and Revolutionary, 2 vols.
1830-1835
1831
Lydia Maria Child: The Coronal, a book of poetry.
1831
The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave, a dictated slave narrative.
William Lloyd Garrison establishes The Liberator. The first series of paperback editions appear. The first horse-drawn buses are in use in New York. The first Convention of People of Color/National Negro Convention is held in Philadelphia. Nat Turner leads a slave rebellion in Virginia; he and his followers kill at least 55 whites; Turner and other rebels are later hanged after a trial. Two African American women's literary societies—the Female Literary
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1831
1831
Association of Philadelphia and the AfricAmerican Female Intelligence Society of Boston— are formed. The publishing house of Appleton brings out its first book; in 1838 the firm becomes known as D. Appleton & Co.
1832
Memoir of Mrs. Chloe Spear, a Native of Africa, Who Was Enslaved in Childhood, and Died in Boston, January 3, 1815, by a "Lady of Boston." Fanny Newell: Memoirs of Fanny Newell, Written by Herself.
1832
The New England AntiSlavery Society is founded in Boston. Maria Stewart, an African American, becomes the first native-born U.S. woman to make public speaking her career. The word "socialism" comes into use in English and French. Cholera epidemic. The first commuter steam rail service is introduced in New York. In Worcester v. Georgia, Chief Justice Marshall upholds the supremacy of U.S. treaties and thus denies Georgia any control over Cherokee territory; in 1838 President Jackson and the state of Georgia ignore the ruling as they begin the Indian
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1832
1832
"removal" dubbed the "Trail of Tears." The Black Hawk War ends the last Native American resistance in the territory north of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi River. The Houghton Mifflin publishing company is founded.
1832-1865
1833
Maria Brooks, writing as "Maria del Occidente": Zophiel, an epic poem. Lydia Maria Child: An Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans. One of the first antislavery works, this piece creates so much controversy and causes the loss
1832-1865
The publishing firm Allen & Ticknor (later William D. Ticknor & Co.) occupies the Old Corner Book Store in Boston, a virtual mecca for novelists, poets, actors, historians, and other eminent figures of the day; in 1849 the imprint Ticknor & Fields first appears in its books. Harriet Beecher Stowe and Julia Ward Howe are among the authors on its list.
1833
The American AntiSlavery Society is formed. Lucretia Mott, abolitionist and a leader of the 19thcentury woman suffrage movement, forms the Philadelphia Female AntiSlavery Society (PFAS), one of the first political organizations for women.
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1833
of so many subscribers that Child is forced to close down her children's magazine, Juvenile Miscellany. Eliza Leslie: Pencil Sketches. PeninaMoise (17971880), poet, hymnologist, teacher: Fancy's Sketch Book, probably the first published book to which a Jewish woman appends her full name. Abigail Goodrich Whittesley becomes the first editor of the nation's first magazine for mothers: Mother's Magazine.
Catharine Read Williams: Fall River, an Authentic Narrative, an early example of investigative journalistic writing, tells of the murder of Sarah Maria Cornell, a young textile worker, and the subsequent trial of the Reverend Ephraim Kingsbury Avery.
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1833
On June 27, Prudence Crandall, teacher and abolitionist, is arrested for violating Connecticut's infamous "Black Law," which made it illegal to set up a school for blacks not from Connecticut; the school is closed and is put up for sale the following year. George Palmer Putnam becomes an associate at the firm of Wiley & Long; after Long's departure in 1840, the firm becomes Wiley & Putnam and soon is publishing works by Poe, Hawthorne, and Melville in its Library of American Books series. The first "penny press" is the New York Sun; whereas paper had previously cost between eight and ten dollars a year, the invention of power presses and machine-made paper allowed smaller newspapers to begin selling for a penny a copy. The Knickerbocker Magazine begins its 32 years in print.
Oberlin College, the first coeducational, multiracial
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college in the States, is founded in Ohio. The first tax-supported public library opens in New Hampshire. Alexis de Tocqueville visits America.
1834
Sarah Flower Adams (1805-1848) composes the hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee." She also writes poetry and magazine articles. Caroline Howard Oilman (1794-1888), poet, memoirist, editor of a children's magazine, The Rose Bud; known as a humorous chronicler of middleclass domesticity: Recollections of a Housekeeper, published under the pseudonym "Mrs. Clarissa Packard." Lydia Sigourney: Sketches and Poems. Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811 — 1896), novelist, short-story writer, abolitionist, author of domestic manuals: "A New England Sketch" in Western Monthly Magazine.
1834
Mary Ayers sends the first petition for a change in married women's property laws to the New York State legislature; when unrolled, it measures approximately 15 feet. The National Trade Union is founded, William Whewell coins the term "scientist" and declares "there is a sex in minds." Elizabeth Palmer Peabody becomes Bronson Alcott's assistant at his Temple School, staying for two years even though Alcott was notoriously difficult to work for and frequently did not pay her for her labors, The Southern Literary Mes~ senger begins its 30-year run.
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1835
Lydia Maria Child: The History of the Condition of Women, in Various Ages and Nations, 2 vols.
55
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Sarah Josepha Hale: Traits of American Life.
The nation's first women's prison, New York's Mount Pleasant Female Prison, opens. Pimps make their first appearance in New York City.
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Home: Scenes and Characters Illustrating Christian Truth, Tales and Sketches, and The Linwoods, a novel.
The New York Herald is founded, the first newspaper to proclaim and maintain its political independence.
Lydia Sigourney: Zinzendorff, and Other Poems.
Baby bottle nipples are first introduced.
Maria Stewart (18031879), African American religious author: Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart, a spiritual autobiography. Women of the American Female Moral Reform Society begin publication of The Advocate. 1835-1842 1836
Catharine Beecher: Letters on the Difficulties of Religion.
Elizabeth Margaret Chandler (1807-1834), Quaker poet and essayist, the first American woman author to make slavery the principal theme of her writing:
1835-1842
Second Seminole War.
1836
Battle of the Alamo. Congress institutes a "gag rule" whereby no antislavery petitions could be introduced before it after this date; since for many women petition-signing is the only acceptable (because relatively private)
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1836
Essays, Philanthropic and Moral and The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Margaret Chandler, published posthumously. Lydia Maria Child: Pbilothea, a novel. Eliza Farrar (1791-1870): The Young Lady's Friend, an extremely popular advice book. Angelina Emily Grimke (1805-1879), abolitionist and woman's rights pioneer: Appeal to Christian Women of the Southern States. It is widely banned in the South for its persuasive argument that women should use their influence on the men in their lives to abolish slavery and its evils. Jarena Lee (1783-1849?), unordained but licensed minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, begins writing and selling autobiographical pamphlets, culminating in a book, Religious Experiences and Journal of Jarena Lee, Giving an Account of Her Call to Preach the Gospel, published 1849. Margaret Morris: Private Journal Kept During a Portion of the Revolutionary
1836
mode of protest, this action effectively stifles their voices in the public debate over slavery. The gag rule is not repealed until 1844. The first McGuffey's Reader is introduced: the series of readers is widely used in public schools and is still in use today in some schools. The Philadelphia newspaper the Public Ledger appears. In Boston, a group of African American women storm a courtroom and help two fugitive slave women escape to freedom before the two can be returned to their masters under the Fugitive Slave Law. Having reached the Continental Divide while migrating west with their husbands, Eliza Hart Spalding and Narcissa Whitman become the first white women to cross it and the Rocky Mountains. Georgia Female College in Macon, Georgia (later Wesleyan College) becomes the first chartered women's college to confer on women honors, de-
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1836
War, for the Amusement of a Sister by Margaret Morris of Burlington, New Jersey.
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1836
Martin Van Buren is elected President.
Almira Hart Phelps (1793-1884), pioneer for female education, writer of stories and textbooks, especially for girls: The Female Student; or, Lectures to Young Ladies on Female Education (republished as The Fireside Friend, 1840).
1837
Catharine Beecher: An Essay on Slavery and Abolitionism. Caroline Howard Gilman: Recollections of a Southern Matron, a novel, and "Mary Anna Gibbes, the Young Heroine of Stono, S.C.," a dramatic poem about a young girl's adventures in the Revolutionary War. Sarah Josepha Hale: The Ladies' Wreath. Hannah Lee (1780-1865): Elinor Fulton, a novel, and Three Experiments of Living, both published anonymously. Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Live and Let Live. Lydia Sigourney: History of the Condition of Women.
grees, and licenses "usually conferred in colleges and universities."
The New Orleans Picayune begins circulation.
1837
Victoria becomes Queen of Great Britain, the beginning of a 64-year reign; her coronation is held in 1838. The U.S. experiences economic depression; 600 banks close. The first Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women is held in New York City. Mary Lyon founds the Mount Holyoke Seminary for women, believing that to educate young women "to a new direction" it was necessary to remove them from their homes and their private concerns. To save money and demonstrate that the seminary was not subversive in intent, Lyon requires students to perform all the housekeeping. The semi-
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1837
1837
nary is swamped with applicants; the school becomes Mount Holyoke College in 1893. By this year there are 77 all-female antislavery societies. The Democratic Review begins publication; it folds in 1859. The Baltimore newspaper the Sun appears; it still circulates today. P. T. Barnutn pulls his first successful hoax by convincing credulous audiences that a 46-pound African American woman, Joyce Heth, was actually 161 years old and had once been George Washington's nurse. Mary Ann Lee (18261899) becomes the country's first ballerina.
1837-1877
Sarah Josepha Hale starts her long reign as author and editor for the influential Godey 's Lady's Book and American Ladies' Magazine.
1837-1877
1838
Maria Brooks: Idomen: or the Vale ofYumuri, a fictionalized autobiography serialized in the Saturday Evening Gazette.
1838
The Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women is held in Pennsylvania; Angelina Grimke, who only the day before had
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1838
ElleanorEldridge(17851865), African American author: Memoirs ofElleanor Eldridge. Emma Catherine Embury. Constance Latimer; or, The Blind Girl, a novel written to help support an institution for the blind. Eliza Lee Eollen: Sketches of Married Life, a moral tale. Caroline Howard Oilman: The Poetry of Traveling in the United States, a novel. Sarah Moore Grimke (1792-1873): Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Women. Louisa Medina: Ernest Maltravers, a play. Catharine Maria Sedgwick: A Love-token for Children. Ann Sophia Stephens (1810P-1886), novelist, short-story writer, humorist, poet, and journalist: "Mary Derwent," a short story, which wins a Ladies Companion's prize. Twenty years later Stephens expands it into a novel.
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1838
married fellow abolitionist Theodore Weld, is a featured speaker; three days later, the site of the convention, Pennsylvania Hall, is burned to the ground by a mob angered by the convention's intermingling of African Americans and whites. English phrenologist George Combe popularizes phrenology, the study of the shape of the head, in the U.S. during his two-year lecture tour. Vegetarianism has its beginnings in the U.S. when the American Health Convention endorses vegetable diets. Cherokee Indians expelled from the East Coast begin the infamous "Trail of Tears" toward reservations in the Midwest: one out of four of the 15,000 Cherokees who are "removed" in the 1830s die on the journey to what is now known as Oklahoma. When Angelina Grimke speaks before the Massachusetts state legislature, she becomes the first woman ever to speak before a legislative body. John Quiricy Adams, in a
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1838
1839
Sarah Josepha Hale: The Lecturess; or, Woman's Sphere, published anonymously. Caroline Stansbury Kirkland (1801-1864): ^ New Home— Who'// Follow? or, Glimpses of Western Life, a novel published under the pseudonym, "Mrs. Mary Claver, an Actual Settler." FYances Sargent Osgood (1811-1850), poet: The Casket of Fate.
Eliza Wilkerson, a Charleston author: Letters. Catharine Read Williams: Biography of Revolutionary Heroes.
1838
series of speeches published this year, defends the right of women to collect signatures and sign petitions.
1839
Margaret Fuller begins her "conversations" or discussion series for women in her home in Boston. The American Female Moral Reform Society includes several hundred local and state associations. Educator Elizabeth Palmer Peabody opens a bookstore in Boston that soon becomes the meeting place for the Transcendentalists. The Transcendental journal The Dial, to which Peabody contributes several pieces, will be published in the back room of the store from 1842 to 1843; the store burns to the ground in 1844. Josephine Amelia Perkins becomes notorious as the first woman horse-thief of record in the U.S. The first married women's property act, allowing women to retain property that had automatically gone to their bus-
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bands upon marriage, passes in Mississippi; Maryland, Arkansas, and Pennsylvania soon follow with their own acts —the fact that the first three states to pass such laws were southern is in large part a sign of these states' interest in preserving slaves as property. The Anti-Rent War is fought in New York's Hudson Valley. George Rex Graham purchases a monthly magazine, The Casket (18261840), and merges it with Burton V Gentleman's Magazine (1837-1840) to create Graham's Magazine, a leading literary journal, with its heyday in the 1840s. With the publication of two weekly periodicals, Brother Jonathan and, in 1840, the New World, the novels in newspaper format eventually known as the "story papers" get their start, priced at between 6V4 and 12!/2 cents; they serve as the prototypes for paperback novels.
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1840
Margaret Fuller (18101850), journalist, essayist, and feminist, begins a two-year tenure as editor of the Transcendentalist magazine The Dial.
1840s
Some 800 works of fiction by American authors are published in this decade alone.
1840
Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton go to London as delegates to the World Anti-Slavery Convention but are not admitted to the floor on account of their sex.
Caroline Howard Oilman: Lave's Progress, a novel published anonymously.
The Liberty Party—the first antislavery political party— is established.
Eliza Leslie: The Housebook; or, A Manual of Domestic Economy.
William Henry Harrison is elected President; a year later, he becomes the first President to die in office and is succeeded by John Tyler.
The first issue of The Lowell Offering, a periodical featuring the articles and poetry of women employed by the Lowell Textile Mills, is published.
1841
Catharine Beecher: A Treatise on Domestic Economy. Margaret Miller Davidson (1823-1838): Biographical and Poetical Remains of the Late Margaret Miller Davidson, Washington Irving, ed., published posthumously. Mrs. A. J. Graves: Women in America: Being an Examination into the Moral and
Eleven percent of the population is urban. 1841
Oberlin College graduates its first female student. Horace Greeley founds the New York Tribune. Elizabeth Adams invents and patents a pregnancy corset.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1841
Intellectual Condition of American Female Society.
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1841
Eliza Leslie: Mr. and Mrs. Woodbridge, with Other Tales. Ann Plato (1820?-?): Essays; Including Biographies and Miscellaneous Pieces in Prose and Poetry, the first known collection of essays by an African American. Lydia Sigourney: Pocahontas, and Other Poems and Poems, Religious and Elegaic. 1841-1846
1842
Harriet Farley Donlevy (1813-1907) becomes coeditor of The Lowell Offering. Elleanor Eldridge: Elleanor's Second Book. Caroline Kirkland: Forest Life, a novel.
1841-1846
Transcendentalists and literary figures, including at certain moments Margaret Fuller and Nathaniel Hawthorne, gather at Brook Farm in Massachusetts in an attempt to found a Utopian community under the leadership of George Ripley.
1842
The Supreme Court upholds a 1793 act allowing slaveowners to retrieve fugitive slaves. Southern Quarterly Review begins its 15-year run. The New York Philharmonic Society Orchestra gives its first performance.
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1842
Elizabeth Oakcs Smith (1806-1893), poet, novelist, essayist, reformer: The Western Captive, a novel.
1842-1898
1843
Margaret Fuller: "The Great Lawsuit: Man versus Men. Woman versus Women." Caroline Lee Hentz (1800-1856), southern author of ten novels, shortstory writer, and playwright: De Lara; or, the Moorish Bride; a Tragedy, a prize-winning play. Rebecca Cox Jackson (1795-1871), a free black woman who, in 1830, leaves her husband, home, and family for a life of spiritual commitment, becoming a Shaker visionary and preacher. She begins to write her memoirs, which include a series of dreams and visions. Kliza Leslie: Mrs. Washington Potts, and Mr. Smith: Tales.
1842
1842-1898
Peterson's Magazine begins publishing under its original name, Ladies' National Magazine; it is co-edited by Charles Jacobs Peterson and author Ann S. Stephens.
1843
The typewriter is invented. The word "millionaire" is first coined in obituaries of banker, landlord, and tobacconist Pierre Lorillard. The Alcott family is among those gathered at Fruitlands in Harvard, Massachusetts, a shortlived Utopian community.
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1843
Maria Jane Mclntosh (1803-1878), novelist and children's author: Woman an Enigma; or, Life and Its Revealings, published anonymously.
CONTEXTS
1843
Phoebe W. Palmer (1807-1874): The Way of Holiness. Ann Sophia Stephens: High Life in New York, a humorous novel. Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Mayflower; or, Sketches of Scenes and Characters among the Descendants of the Puritans.
1844
Charlotte Barnes Conner: The Forest Princess, a play. Fanny Crosby (18201915), blind poet and hymnwriter: The Blind Girl, and Other Poems. Margaret Fuller: Summer on the Lakes, a travel narrative. Mrs. A. J. Graves: Girlhood and Womanhood; or, Sketches of My Schoolmates. Estelle Lewis (18241880), poet and playwright: Records of the Mean, collection of poetiy.
1844
For the first time documented, women are allowed to study in an American art school. The first female manikin ever exhibited in America is used by Pauline Wright in her lectures on the physiology of women to women audiences. James K. Polk is elected President.
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1844
Cornelia Mee: A Manual of Knitting, Netting and Crochet.
1844
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Tales and Sketches, Second Series, including the novella Wilton Harvey. Ann Sophia Stephens: Alice Copley, a novel. Louisa Caroline Tuthill (1799-1879), author of household manuals, advice books, children's tales, and novels: The Belle, the Blue, and the Bigot; or, Three Fields for Woman's Influence, a moral tale.
1845
Frances Manwaring Caulkins, after a long career as a tract writer, begins a second career writing local histories: The History of Norwich, Connecticut, from Its Settlement in 1660 to January, 1845. Margaret Fuller: Woman in the Nineteenth Century, salutes the "triumphs of Female Authorship" as a "sign of the times." Sarah Josepha Hale: Keeping House and Housekeeping: A Story of Domestic Life.
Caroline Kirkland: Western Clearings, a highly
1845
Sarah Bagley, the first notable woman trade unionist, founds and serves as president of the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association, making her the first known woman union leader. She helps organize a petition to the Massachusetts legislature for restriction of the workday to ten hours. Theophilus B. Peterson, perhaps the leading publisher of sensational fiction and cheap reprints, begins his publishing career; among the authors on his list is E.D.E.N. South worth.
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1845
praised collection of sketches.
CONTEXTS
1845
American Whig Review begins its seven-year run.
1846
The influential southern journal Debow's Review appears in print.
Anna Cora Mowatt Ritchie (1819-1870), novelist, actress: Fashion, witty satire of 19thcentury New York society.
1846
Catharine Beecher: The Domestic Receipt Book. Emily Chubbuck: Alderbook: A Collection of Fanny Forrester's Village Sketches, Poems, Etc. Susan Fenimore Cooper (1813-1894), writing as "Amabel Penfeather": Elinor Wyllys; or, The Young Folk at Longbridge, a novel. Zilpha Elaw, African American antebellum minister, writes of her life's religious work in Memoirs of the Life, Religious Experience, Ministerial Travels and Labours of Mrs. Zilpha Elaw, an American Female of Color; Together with Some Account of the Great Religious Revivals in America (published in England). Eliza Woodson Farnham (1815-1864), novelist, essayist, suffragist, abolition-
The Donner Party is lost in the Sierra Nevada Mountains on their way to California; the 47 survivors out of the original 87 are said to have practiced cannibalism in order to survive. The sewing machine is patented by Elias Howe. Mount Union College in Ohio grants absolutely equal rights to its women students, the first coeducational U.S. college known to do so. The National Medical Convention, which in the following year takes the name the American Medical Association, is formally established; at their annual convention, doctors would often toast "Woman—God's best gift to man and the chief
68 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1846
1st, and prison reformer: Life in Prairie Land,
1846
support of the Doctors." The state of Maine passes the first statute prohibiting the sale, manufacture, or transportation of alcohol; by 1855, twelve additional states have passed such laws (known as "Maine Laws"), although by the end of the Civil War, nine of these states have repealed or declared unconstitutional their earlier statutes.
Sarah Josepha Hale: '''Boarding Out": A Tale of Domestic Life, published anonymously. Caroline Lee Hentz: Aunt Patty's Scrap Bag, a story collection. Maria Jane Mclntosh: Two Lives; or, To Seem and To Be, a novel.
Charles Scribner begins his publishing career.
Catharine Maria Sedgwick: The Morals of Manners. Louisa Caroline Tuthill: My Wife, a moral tale. Frances Whitcher (1811?1852), writing as "Frank" for Neal's Saturday Gazette, becomes the first woman to publish serial satirical writing. 1846-1848
1847
Mary Andrews Denison (1826-1911), prolific author of short stories, sketches, nonfiction, and novels, including many dime novels: Edna Etheril, a Boston Seamstress.
1846-1848
The Mexican War results in the U.S. appropriating territories that will become California, Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico.
1847
Frederick Douglass starts his abolitionist paper The North Star. The Massachusetts Quarterly Review begins publication; it is colloquially
Women Writers in the United States * 69 TEXTS 1847
Asenath Hatch Nicholson: Ireland's Welcome to a Stranger; or an Excursion through Ireland, in 1844 and 1845, for the Purpose of Personally Investigating the Condition of the Poor.
CONTEXTS 1847
Mrs. Henry Owen: The Illuminated Book of Needlework.
The Chicago Tribune begins publication.
E.D.E.N. Southworth (1819-1899), Retribution, the first of more than 60 novels by one of the most prolific and widely read novelists of her day; it is first serialized in the Washington, D.C., newspaper National Era. 1847-1903
1848
Cherokee Rose Bud, a school newsletter, is published by the Cherokee Female Seminary in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. Nancy E. Flicks, a member of the Cherokee people, serves as editor for a time. Elizabeth Ellet (1812?1877), first historian of
known as "the Dial with a beard," presumably because of its male editorship—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Theodore Parker, andj. Elliot Cabot—and its focus on politics and literary criticism.
The imprint of Little, Brown & Co. is first used. The American Association for the Advancement of Science is founded.
1847-1903
The New York Ledger appears as a weekly storypaper; it features such writers as "Fanny Fern" (Sara Payson Willis Parton), E.D.E.N. Southworth, and Harriet Beecher Stowe.
1848
Gold is discovered in California. The first Chinese woman immigrant, Marie Seise, disembarks in San Francisco. She arrives on the Eagle with the Charles V. Gillespie household, for whom she works as a servant.
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1848
American women: The Women of the American Revolution, 2 vols., supplemented by Domestic History of the American Revolution in 1850. Eliza Leslie: Amelia; or, A Young Lady's Vicissitudes, a novel. Maria Jane Mclntosh: Charms and CounterCharms, a novel depicting the need for women's emotional independence; it sells over 100,000 copies. Almira Hart Phelps: Ida Norman; or, Trials and Their Uses, a moral novel. Catharine Maria Sedgwick: The Boy of Mount Rhigi. lilizabeth Oakes Smith: The Salamander. Louisa Caroline Tuthill: History of Architecture from, the Earliest Times.
1848
New York State passes its Married Women Property Act. The "Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions" is delivered at the Seneca Falls Convention, becoming the first major document to define the issues and goals of the 19thcentury's woman's rights movement. Because of censures on women speaking in public, a man chairs the meeting, although the "Declaration" itself is written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucrettia Mott, and other women. The first formal woman's rights convention in the country draws about 300 people and receives much negative press. The first school integration suit is filed in Boston by African American Benjamin Roberts, whose daughter, Sarah, is forced to pass five white schools every day on her way to her segregated school. In 1849, in Sarah C. Roberts v. City of Boston, the state supreme court is the first to use the "separate but equal" doctrine in upholding the legality of segregation.
Women Writers in the United States * 77 TEXTS
CONTEXTS 1848
1848
The Utopian Oneida Community, noted for its liberated sexual arrangements and practice of birth control, is established; it disbands in 1881. The Fox sisters, Margaret and Kate, launch the spiritualist craze when they claim to be mediums for a spirit named Charles B. Rosma. The spirits "communicate" with them through rappings; these sounds are later revealed to have been produced by the sisters' double-jointed toes. The Working Women's Protective Union is formed. The Free Soil Party is founded. Zachary Taylor is elected President. Chewing gum is first sold commercially in the U.S.
1849
Representative of many women of her era, Catherine Haun keeps a diary of her trip across the plains with her family. Caroline Kirkland: Holidays Abroad.
1849
Harriet "Moses" Tubman escapes from slavery and spends the next decade helping other slaves to escape through "The Underground Railroad." Elizabeth Blackwell becomes the first woman to earn her medical degree
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Lucretia Mott (17931880), abolitionist, feminist, author: Discourse on Woman. Mary Sargeant Nichols (1810-1884): Agnes Morris; or, The Heroine of Domestic Life and The Two Loves; or, Eros and Anteros, both published anonymously. Catharine Seeley: Memoir of Catharine Seeley, Late of Darien, Connecticut. Lydia Sigourney: The Young Ladies' Offering; or, Gems of Prose and Poetry.
1849
(from Geneva Medical School in New York, where the all-male student body had agreed to admit her as a sort of practical joke). Cholera epidemic. Amelia Jenks Bloomer, advocate for women's dress reform, begins editing and publishing Lily, a feminist temperance paper. Lilly Martin Spencer (1822-1902), renowned artist and painter of still lifes and family life, moves with her family to New York, where she studies and exhibits at the National Academy of Design. She supports her family through her painting while her husband takes care of domestic responsibilities; their marriage lasts 46 years and produces 13 children. One of the most popular of the genre painters, she specializes in humorous domestic scenes such as Domestic Happiness, The Jolly Washerwoman, Peeling Onions, and The Young Husband: First Marketing. Throughout the century, many of her works are reproduced as lithographs and engravings.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
CONTEXTS 1849
1849
13
The safety pin is invented. Agdalena Goodman patents a broom-duster.
1850s
1850s
Women begin suing for custody of children in divorce cases, and winning. Spiritualism's popularity soars in the U.S.; many seances are held and at least six periodicals devoted to the subject appear. Women begin working as waitresses in restaurants. Approximately 6000 prostitutes are working in New York City, or one for every 64 men.
1850
Catharine Beecher. Truth Stranger than Fiction. Emily Edson Briggs: Ellen Parry; or, Trials of the Heart. Susan Fenimore Cooper: Rural Hours, a nature diary. Eliza Ann Dupuy (18141880): The Conspirator, a gothic fiction. Ann Lewis Hardeman, living near Jackson, Mississippi^ with her extended
1850
U.S. population totals 23 million; this includes 3.2 million blacks, approximately 1,827,550 of whom are female, and 1,601,779 of these are slaves. As part of the Compromise of 1850, territories won in the Mexican War are allowed to enter the union as either free or slave states according to their respective constitutions upon admission. The slave trade is abolished in Washington,
14 * Women Writers in the United States
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1850
family, begins keeping a journal of her life and religious thought; she continues it through 1867. Caroline Lee Hentz: Linda; or, The Young Pilot of the Belle Creole, a novel. Charlotte A. Jerauld (1820-1845): Chronicles and Sketches of Hazlehurst: Poetry and Prose by Mrs. Charlotte A. Jerauld, with a Memoir by Henry Bacon, published posthumously. Jerauld is believed to have been writing some of the works in this volume as early as 1843. Sara Jane Lippincott (1823-1904), writing under the pseudonym "Grace Greenwood," journalist, travel writer: Greenwood Leaves, best-seller combining tales, sketches, letters, and parodies. Alice Emilly Bradley Neal (1827-1863): The Gossips of Rivertown: With Sketches in Prose and Verse. Nancy Prince (1799-?):/f Narrative of the Life and Travels of Mrs. Nancy Prince, travel narration of an African American woman who went abroad with her husband, em-
1850
D.C., as a concession to the North, but the Fugitive Slave Law, requiring escaped slaves to be returned to their masters, is also incorporated into the Compromise as a concession to the South. A California statute nullifies all marriages between whites and "Negroes [or] mulattoes." Seventeen states now grant a married woman the legal right to own and manage her own property. Author E.D.E.N. Southworth makes inquiries in Washington, D.C., about a divorce from her husband; her editor, Robert Bonner, gets a bill submitted to Congress on Southworth's behalf which would give D.C. courts the power to grant divorces. Harper's New Monthly Magazine begins publication; its circulation soon tops 200,000 largely due to its handsome illustrations and its serializing of popular English novels. Alabama passes the first adoption law; Massachusetts follows the next year.
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1850
ployed by the czar of Russia. Lydia Sigourney: Poems for the Sea. Sojourner Truth (1797?1883): Narrative of Sojourner Truth, Northern Slave, Emancipated from Bodily Servitude by the State of New York, in 1828 (ghostwritten). Born into slavery with the name Isabella, she takes the name Sojourner Truth from mystical visions she had in 1843 and becomes one of the most forceful female orators of her time. Susan Warner, writing as "Elizabeth Wetherell" (1819-1885): The Wide, Wide World. After numerous rejections, including a dismissive "fudge" from the house of Harper, Warner submits her manuscript to the house of Putnam; when Putnam brings it home to his mother, thinking she would find it amusing, she begs him to publish it at once. Putnam does so, and it goes on to become a huge bestseller. With this novel, Warner becomes the first U.S. woman author to sell one million copies. Many other women writers turn
1850
Married couples have an average of 5.42 children. Infant mortality among slaves is twice that for whites. The Female (later Woman's) Medical College of Pennsylvania, one of the first medical colleges for women, is established. When Lucy Sessions graduates with a degree in literature from Oberlin College, she becomes the first known African American woman in the U.S. to earn a college degree. Abby Alcott, mother of author Louisa May and wife of educator Bronson, opens an employment agency in Boston and advocates fair and equal wages for immigrant women. Maria Mitchell becomes the first woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; in 1847 she identifies the comet known as Comet Mitchell, becoming the first person to identify a comet with a telescope. She is considered one of the greatest women scientists
76 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1850
to Putnam, hoping to duplicate her success.
CONTEXTS 1850
of her generation and encourages many women to enter scientific fields. P. T. Barnum announces that he will be bringing the world-renowned "Swedish Nightingale," Jenny Lind, to the U.S. for a tour of 150 concerts. Lind is to be paid $1000 plus half of all receipts for each concert. The tour is a great success. The following year Lind, now the "Sweetheart of All America," weds her pianist in Boston. Antoinette Brown (Blackwell) completes theological courses at Oberlin but is not allowed to graduate because of her sex. Although Oberlin is coeducational, it will not grant a woman a degree in theology.
1850-60
1850-60
In every year of this tenyear period except 1857, a National Woman's Rights Convention is held.
1850-1885
1850-1885
At least 26 different types of pessaries — a diaphragm-like contraceptive—are patented.
Women Writers in the United States
TEXTS 1851
Catharine Beecher: The True Remedy for the Wrongs of Woman. Alice Gary (1820-1871), regionalist fiction writer: Clovernook, or Recollections of Our Neighborhood in the West, sketches of frontier life from a woman's perspective. Caroline Chesebro' (1825-1873), author of 20 volumes of fiction: Dream-land by Daylight: A Panorama of Romance, a collection of stories. Muriel Goaman: Judy's Book of Sewing and Knitting. Caroline Lee Hentz: Rena; or, the Snow Bird, a novel. Jane Caroline North, a society belle in South Carolina, keeps a two-year journal of her experiences. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1815-1852), author of five children's books, two novels, and several volumes of stories, sometimes written under "H. Trusta" and sometimes anonymously: Kitty Brown and Her Bible Verses, for children, and The Sunny
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CONTEXTS 1851
Black activist Sojourner Truth, after listening to descriptions of "woman's" frailty and dependency, gives her famous speech, asking "Ain't I a Woman?" The Cherokee Female Seminary opens in Park Hill, Oklahoma. Destroyed by fire in 1887, it is rebuilt in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, eventually to become Northeastern Oklahoma State University. The New York Times is established. Isaac M. Singer devises the continuous stitch sewing machine. An ice-making machine is invented. Elizabeth Smith Miller invents the trouser-like undergarments that would later come to be known as "bloomers" after they are worn by feminist Amelia Bloomer. Elizabeth TaylorGreenfield (1809-1876), widely acclaimed vocalist with a range embracing 27 notes, first appears before audiences in New
18 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1851
Side; or, The Country Minister's Wife, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1851
Lydia Sigourney: Letters to My Pupils: with Narrative and Biographical Sketches.
The first school to train African American girls to be teachers opens in Washington, D.C. It closes in 1859.
E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Mother-in-Law; or, The Isle of Rays and The Discarded Daughter. 1852
Alice Gary: Hagar: A Story for Today and Lyra and Other Poems. Caroline Chesebro': ha: A Pilgrimage, a novel.
York City. She will later tour across Europe.
1852
Catharine Beecher founds the American Women's Education Association.
Sarah Josepha Hale compiles the 903-page Woman's Record; or Sketches of All Distinguished Women, from "the Beginning" till A. D. 1850. Arranged in Four Eras with Selections from Female Writers of Every Age.
Rebecca Mann Pennell of Antioch College in Ohio becomes the first woman college professor at a coed institution granted the same privileges as male professors; at other such schools women professors are, among other things, typically not allowed to attend faculty meetings.
Caroline Lee Hentz: Marcus Warland and Eoline; or, Magnolia Vale.
Women represent the majority of public school teachers.
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps: The Angel over the Right Shoulder, a collection of stories; Kitty Brown and Her Little School, for children; and A Peep at "Number Five"; or, A Chapter in the Life of a City Pastor, a novel.
The Lady's Home Magazine is first published. The first "day nursery" opens in New York City. Godey's Lady's Book begins featuring paragraphs headed "Employment of
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1852
Lydia Allen Rudd keeps a diary of her experiences journeying across the frontier to settle in Oregon.
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1852
The word "lingerie" comes into general circulation. Matrimonial agencies arranging marriages for couples become popular.
Harriet Beecher Stowe: Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly. It had appeared serially in National Era in 1851. During its first year 350,000 copies are sold, garnering the author $10,000 in the first three months.
Antioch College becomes the first nonsectarian college to grant women and men absolutely equal rights. Franklin Pierce is elected President. E. P. Dutton begins his publishing career as a partner in the firm of Ide & Dutton; in 1858, he buys his partner out and renames the firm E. P. Dutton & Co.
Anna Warner, writing as "Amy Lothrop": Dollars and Cents. Susan Warner, writing as "Elizabeth Wetherell": Queechy.
1853
Alice Gary: Clovernook; or, Recollections of Our Neighborhood in the West, second series. Caroline Chesebro': The Children of Light, a novel.
Women," which focus on women in business and industry. The first paper bags are manufactured.
E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Curse of Clifton, one of this prolific author's most popular books. Later editions were entitled Fallen Pride and The Mountain-Girl's Love.
1852-1898
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18 5 2 -1898
Arthur's Home Magazine is in circulation.
1853
Antoinette Brown Blackwell, woman's rights reformer, theologian, and social scientist, becomes the first ordained woman minister of a mainstream U.S. denomination.
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1853
Paulina Davis begins publishing- Una, the first woman's rights newspaper in the U.S. Sarah Josepha Hale: The New Household Receipt Book. Caroline Lee Hentz: Helen and Arthur; or, Miss Thusa's Spinning-Wheel. Caroline Kirkland: The Helping Hand, about her experiences as an officer of the Female Department of the New York Prison Association, and A Book for the Home Circle. Maria Jane Mclntosh: The Lofty and the Lowly; or, Good in All and None AllGood. Sara Payson Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern" (1811-1872): Fern Leaves from Fanny's Portfolio. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps: The Tell-Tale; or, Home Secrets Told by Old Travellers, a collection of stones, published posthumously. Therese AJbertine Louisa Robinson, writing as "Talvi": The Exiles.
CONTEXTS 1853
A group of women, concerned over the deterioration of Washington's estate, form the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, raise some $200,000, and succeed in buying the estate in 1859 for preservation. A fire burns the plant of the famous publishinghouse of Harper & Bros, to the ground, causing a loss of more than one million dollars; a huge crowd gathers to watch the fire, and when the new fireproof buildings are built two years later, they become instant tourist attractions. American surgeon Walter Burnham is credited with performing the first successful hysterectomy by the abdominal route.
Women Writers in the United States 4- 81 TEXTS
1853
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor (1831-1885), poet, dime novelist, humorist, publishing under several pseudonyms: The Senator's Son, a temperance novel.
CONTEXTS
1853
Sarah Helen Whitman (1803-1878), poet and Poe biographer, advocate of educational reforms, divorce, the prevention of cruelty to animals, woman's rights, and universal suffrage: Hours of Life, and Other Poems. 1853-1857
1854
Mary Ann Shadd Gary, born in Wilmington, Delaware, and educated in Pennsylvania by Quakers, becomes the first black woman editor when she begins publishing an antislavery newspaper, the Provincial Freeman, in Canada. Caroline Chesebro': The Little Cross-Bearers. Maria Susanna Cummins (1827-1866): The Lamplighter, best-selling novel, published anonymously. Julia Caroline Ripley Dorr (1825-1913), novelist, poet, and travel
1853-1857
Putnam's Monthly Magazine is published.
1854
The first observation of the fusion of sperm and egg proves children inherit equally from mothers and fathers. Kansas-Nebraska Act. The Republican Party is established. Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell founds the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, staffed entirely by women. In 1868 Blackwell opens the Women's Medical College at the Infirmary. Lincoln University, originally called the Ashmum
82 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1854
writer, writing as "Caroline Thomas": Farmingdale, a novel. Charlotte L. Forten (Grimke, 1837-1914), abolitionist, poet, and educator, an African American woman born free into a prosperous Philadelphia family, begins keeping a diary which she continues through 1864, then again from 1885 through 1892. Portions of the diary are collected and published as The Journal of Charlotte L. Forten in 1953. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911), African American poet, novelist, abolitionist, and advocate of woman's rights: Forest Leaves and Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects. Sarah Marshall Hayden, writing as "Mary Frazaer": Early Engagements, and Florence (A Sequel). Caroline Lee Hentz: The Planter's Northern Bride, a novel. Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907): Tempest and Sunshine; or, Life in Kentucky, one of the bestselling novels of the decade.
1854
Institute, becomes the first African American college in the U.S. In the first substantial Chinese immigration to the U.S., some 13,000 Chinese people arrive in San Francisco.
Women Writers in the United States * 83 TEXTS 1854
Jane Elizabeth Roscoe Hornblower: Vara; or, The Child of Adoption, a novel, published anonymously. Caroline Kirkland: Autumn Hours, and Fireside Reading. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Fern Leaves from Fanny's Portfolio, second series, and Little Ferns for Fanny's Little Friends. Mary Hayden Green Pike (1824-1908), writing as "Mary Langdon": Ida May: A Story of Things Actual and Possible, a novel. Lydia Sigourney: The Western Home, and Other Poems and Past Meridian, a nonfiction exploration of old age. Elizabeth Oakes Smith: Bertha and Lily; or, The Parsonage of Beech Glen and The Newsboy, a reform novel. Ann Sophia Stephens: Fashion and Famine and Ladies' Complete Guide to Crochet, Fancy Knitting, and Needlework.
CONTEXTS 1854
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1854
Harriet Beecher Stowe: "An Appeal to the Women of the Free States."
1854
Mary Virginia Terhune (1830-1922), writing as "Marion Harland," novelist, author of influential domestic advice books and cookbooks: Alone, a novel. Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: Fashionable Dissipations, a temperance novel.
1855
Harriette Newell Woods Baker (1815-1893): Cora and the Doctor; or, Revelations of a Physician's Wife, an evangelical novel, published anonymously. Catharine Beecher: Letters to the People on Health and Happiness, advocates physical education for women. Caroline Chesebro': Getting Along: A Book of Illustrations, an examination of women's commitment to marriage, and The Beautiful Gate, and Other Stories. Lydia Maria Child: Progress of Religious Ideas through Successive Ages, 3 vols. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson, 1835-1909), prolific
1855
Peru abolishes slavery; all countries in the Western Hemisphere are now free except Brazil, Cuba, and the U.S. In a letter to his publisher, author Nathaniel Hawthorne decries the "scribbling women" whom he claims are saturating the market and stealing his potential readers. Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, one of the first illustrated magazines, appears; later known as Leslie's Weekly, it stays in print until 1922. Cyclopaedia of American Literature (2 vols.) appears; a supplement is issued in 1866.
Women Writers in the United States * 85 TEXTS
1855
southern novelist and journalist: Inez: A Tale of the Alamo, published anonymously. Caroline A. Hayden: Carrie Emerson; or, Life at Cliftonville, a novel. Caroline Lee Hentz: Robert Graham, a novel. Mary Jane Holmes: The English Orphans; or, A Home in the New World, a novel. Elizabeth Latimer (18221904): Our Cousin Veronica. Jane E. Locke (18051859), poet and newspaper correspondent: The Recalled, in Voices of the Past, and Poems of the Ideal. Mrs. H. J. Moore: Anna Clayton; or, The Mother's Trial, published anonymously. Mary Sargeant Nichols: Mary Lyndon; or, Revelations of a Life, an autobiographical novel, published anonymously. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Ruth Hall, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1855
Mary Ann Shadd Gary becomes the first female corresponding member of the National Negro Convention. Horseback-riding for American ladies becomes fashionable. Abolitionist Lucy Stone is the first U.S. woman to keep her maiden name after marriage. William Alcott publishes The Young Woman's Book of Health. The Graham Diet becomes popular; it stresses whole grains, fruits, and vegetables and limits animal foods and caffeinated beverages. Hydropathy ("Water Cures") are first prescribed.
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1855
E.D.E.N. Southworth: India: The Pearl of Pearl River and The Missing Bride; or, Miriam the Avenger, novels.
1855
Ann Sophia Stephens: The Old Homestead. Harriet Marion Ward Stephens (1823-1858): Hagar the Martyr; or, Passion and Reality. Maiy Tcrhune, writing as "Marion Harland": The Hidden Path, a novel. Anna Warner: My Brother's Keeper. The weekly Woman's Advocate, under publisher Anne E. McDowell, becomes the first newspaper operated solely by women.
1856
Harriette Baker: The First and the Second Marriages; or, The Courtesies of Wedded Life, a novel. Caroline Chesebro': Philly and Kit and Victoria; or The World Overcome, novels.
1856
"Bleeding Kansas": clashes occur between proslavery Border Ruffians and antislavery FreeStaters over whether Kansas will enter the Union as a slave or free state.
Julia Caroline Dorr: Lanmere, a novel.
The University of Iowa is the first public university to admit female students.
Elizabeth E. Ellet: Pioneer Women of the West, compilation of tnie stories.
Gregory's Medical School in Boston, originally founded in 1848 to train
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1856
Mrs. Benjamin G. Ferris: The Mormons at Home; With Some Incidents of Travel, a memoir. Caroline Lee Hentz: Ernest Linwood, a novel, and Courtship and Marriage; or, The Joys and Sorrows of American Life. Mary Jane Holmes: 'Lena Rivers, a novel. Jane Elizabeth Hornblower: Nellie ofTruro, published anonymously. Maria Jane Mclntosh: Violet; or, The Cross and the Crown, a novel. Louise Chandler Moulton (1835-1908), poet, reviewer, novelist, and literary hostess: Juno Clifford: A Tale, published anonymously. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Rose Clark. Mary Pike, writing as "Sydney A. Story, Jr.": Caste: A Story of Republican Equality, best-selling novel. Margaret Junkin Preston (1820-1897), novelist and poet: Silverwood; A Book of
87
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1856
women as midwives, becomes the New England Female Medical College, one of the first medical schools for women. When her captain husband falls ill, Mrs. Joshua Patten, only 19 years old, takes command of the clipper Neptune's Car, bringing it safely from Cape Horn to San Francisco Bay. Sixty-six children are killed in a train accident in Philadelphia. Baking soda is invented. Gail Borden patents a technique for condensing skimmed milk. James Buchanan is elected President.
88 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1856
Memories, a novel, published anonymously. Anna Cora Mowatt Ritchie: Mimic Life; or, Before and Behind the Curtain, collection of novellas. Eliza Roxey Snow Smith (1804-1886), Mormon poet, hymn writer, and historian: Poems, Religious, Historical, and Political. E.D.E.N. Southworth: Vivia, a novel. Ann Sophia Stephens establishes her own magazine, Mrs. Stephens1 Illustrated New Monthly. It merges with Peterson's in 1858. Harriet Beecher Stowe: Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp. Louisa Caroline Tuthill: Reality; or, The Millionaire's Daughter, a novel. Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: Mormon Wives. Susan Warner: The Hills ofShatemuc, published anonymously.
CONTEXTS 1856
Women Writers in the United States * 89 CONTEXTS
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1856
Frances Whitcher: The Widow Bedott Papers, published posthumously.
1856
1857
Harriette Newell Baker, writing as "Mrs. Madeline Leslie": The Household Angel in Disguise, a novel.
1857
Mary Hartwell Gatherwood (1847-1902): A Woman in Armor. Maria Susanna Cummins: Mabel Vaughan, a novel, published anonymously. Mary Andrews Denison: Grade Amber, a novel. Eliza Ann Dupuy: The Planter's Daughter: A Tale of Louisiana, a novel. Mrs. Gaugain: The Lady's Assistant in Knitting, Netting, and Crochet Work. Mary Jane Holmes: Meadow-Brook,
In its infamous Dred Scott decision, the Supreme Court upholds the Fugitive Slave Law and denies citizenship to blacks. Mrs. Carl Schurz opens the first private "kindergarten" in America in Watertown, Wisconsin. Atlantic magazine (later Atlantic Monthly) is first published under James Russell Lowell's editorship; it is later edited by such literary figures as William Dean Ho wells and James T. Fields and features many prominent women writers among its contributors. The first issue of Harper's Weekly appears.
Mrs. H. J. Moore: The Golden Legacy: A Story of Life's Phases, published anonymously.
The "Liberty" press, an early mechanized press which would greatly enhance and speed the process of printing, is introduced.
Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Fresh Leaves, humorous essays.
In the financial panic of this year, John P. Jewett, publisher of such bestsellers as Stowe's Uncle
90
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1857
Anna Cora Mowatt Ritchie: Twin Roues: A Narrative.
1857
Tom's Cabin and Cummins's The Lamplighter, fails.
1858
Lucy Stone becomes the first woman to be arrested for civil disobedience by refusing to pay property taxes until women are granted suffrage.
Mary Seacole (1805?1881), free-born Jamaican Creole autobiographer: Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands. Catharine Maria Sedgwick: Married or Single?. E.D.E.N. Southworth: Vivia; or, The Secret of Power. Ann Sophia Stephens: The Heiress of Greenhurst: An Autobiography. Mary Terhune, writing as "Marion Harland": MossSide. a novel.
1858
"Aunt Sally": Aunt Sally, or the Cross the Way of Freedom,. Narrative of the Slave-Life and Purchase of the Mother of Rev. Isaac Williams of Detroit, Michigan. Mary Andrews Denison: Old Hepsy, a novel. Alice Emilly Bradley Neal, writing as "Alice Haven": The Coopers; or, Getting Under Way, a novel.
In New York City, 35 women meet and form the Ladies Christian Association, the forerunner of the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). The group formed in Boston in 1866 is the first to use the title
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1858
Mrs. E. N. Gladding: Leaves from an Invalid's Journal and Poems.
1858
YWCA. During a speech in Indiana, activist Sojourner Truth is forced to expose her breasts to prove that she is a woman.
Mary Pike: Agnes, published anonymously. Henrietta Rose: Nora Wilmot: A Tale of Temperance and Woman's Rights.
The Mason jar is patented.
Lydia Sigourney: Lucy Howard's Journal, a novel.
The first Pullman sleeping car comes into use on trains.
Ann Sophia Stephens: Mary Derwent, a novel.
Transatlantic cable is laid. Activist Anna Reeves Jarvis organizes the first Mother's Day, called Mothers' Work Day.
Virginia Frances Townsend (1836-1920), author of magazine articles, novels for young girls, and this adult novel: While It Was Morning.
1859
91
Lillie Devereux Blake (1833-1913), novelist: Southivold.
1859
Abolitionist John Brown leads the Harpers Ferry raid and is later executed.
Alice Gary: Pictures of Country Life and Adopted Daughter and Other Tales.
The last African slave ship, Clothilde, lands in Alabama.
Mary Andrews Denison: Opposite the Jail, published anonymously.
Dr. Maria Zakrzewska, former medical associate of Elizabeth Blackwell, joins the staff at the New England Female Medical College. In 1862, she resigns and goes on to found the soon presti-
Abigail Scott Duniway (1834-1915): Captain Gray's Company; or, Crossing the Plains and Living in
92 * Women Writers in the United States
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TEXTS
1859
Oregon, a semiautobiographical novel. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): Beulah, a novel. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper: "The Two Offers," the first short story published by an African American person in America. Elorence Hartley: The Ladies' Hand Book of Fancy and Ornamental Work. Mary Jane Holmes: Dora Deane; or, The East India Uncle, a novel. Elizabeth King: Memoir of Elizabeth T. King; with Extracts from Her Letters and Journals. Phoebe W. Palmer: Promise of the Father, arguing for the right of women to preach. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Folly As It Flies, humorous essays. E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Hidden Hand, one of Southworth's most popular novels. Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Minister's Wooing, a novel.
1859
gious New England Hospital for Women and Children. The temporary insanity defense is used for the first time in the U.S. to defend Congressman Dan Sickles, accused of murdering his wife's lover. A patent for "kerosene" is taken out. Mary Edmonia Lewis (1845-1890?), sculptor of Chippewa and African heritage, is admitted to the preparatory school at Oberlin in fall 1859. In addition to busts of Abraham Lincoln, John Brown, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Lewis is known for her statues The Death of Cleopatra and Forever Free, which shows an African American woman and man removing shackles at the moment of freedom. A controversial divorce reform bill passes the Indiana state legislature, allowing cruelty, desertion, and drunkenness as grounds for divorce.
Women Writers in the United States * 93 CONTEXTS
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1859
Harriet E.Wilson (18071870): Our Nig; or, Sketches from the Life of a Free Black, in a Two-Story White House, North. Showing That Slavery V Shadows Fall Even There, first known novel by an African American.
1860s
1860
Margaret Irvin Carrington: Ab-sa-ra-ka, Home of the Crows: Being the Experiences of an Officer's Wife on the Plains, and Marking the Vicissitudes of Peril and Pleasure During the Occupation of the New Route to Virginia City, Montana, 1866-7, and the Indian Hostilities Thereto; With Outlines of the Natural Features and Resources of the Land, Tables of Distances, Maps and Other Aids to the Traveler; Gathered from Observation and Other Reliable Sources. Maria Susanna Cummins: El Fureidis, published anonymously.
1859
1860s
Comedienne Lotta Crabtree (1847-1924), who had become a sensation as a child entertaining miners in the California Gold Rush, tours the country in various theater productions and becomes the nation's highest paid female performer.
1860
U.S. population totals 31 million, including 3.5 million slaves; 35 percent of the increase in the population since 1851 can be accounted for by immigration. Erastus Beadle's Dime Novels are first published; 321 such novels are issued in the series before it becomes Beadle's New Dime Novels, whose 309 volumes are all reprints from the initial series. This is the first year Native Americans — albeit only "civilized" ones (i.e., residents of reserva-
94 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1860
Caroline Wells Dall (1822-1912), feminist advocate of coeducation and higher education for women: Woman's Right to Labor; or, LOTH Wages and Hard Work. Mary Andrews Denison: The Mad Hunter, a dime novel. Miriam Coles Harris (1834-1925): Rutledge, a gothic novel. Isabella Beecher Hooker: "Shall Women Vote? A Matrimonial Dialogue." Mrs. H. J. Moore: Wild Nell, the White Mountain Girl, a novel. Harriet Prescott Spofford (1835-1921), prolific author of novels, poetry, biographies, children's stories, travel literature, memoirs, and the genre for which she is best known, short stories: Sir Rohan's Ghost: A Romance, a novel. Ann Sophia Stephens's Malaeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter is published as the first issue of Beadle's Dime Novels. It had first appeared as a se-
1860
tions) —are counted by the census. The first run of the Pony Express takes place. Only five states, all in New England, grant blacks suffrage. Some 20,000 women shoe workers in Lynn, Massachusetts, go on strike. Anna Dickinson, the abolitionist Lyceum lecturer and advocate of women's, laborers', and immigrants' rights, delivers her first speech. Critics have suggested that Bayard Taylor's novel Hannah Thurston (1864) and Henry James's The Bostonians (1886) both model characters after Dickinson and treat those characters and their position on women's rights with ambiguity if not derision. Olympia Brown becomes the first U.S. woman to study theology in full fellowship with men at St. Lawrence University. Elizabeth Palmer Peabody opens the country's first formally organized private kindergarten.
Women Writers in the United States * 95 TEXTS 1860
rial in The Ladies'1 Companion in 1839.
CONTEXTS 1860
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: Alice Wilde, the Raftsman's Daughter, Dime Novel No. 4.
The national network of railroads includes some 30,000 miles of tracks; by 1890 there would be 164,000 miles.
Anna Warner and Susan Warner, writing as "Susan Wetherell" and "Amy Lothrop": Say and Seal.
Of approximately 35,000 Chinese in America, only 1,784 are women; 85 percent of Chinese women living in San Francisco are prostitutes.
Rhoda Eli?,abeth White, writing as "Uncle Ben," novelist, humorist, educational reformer: Mary Staunton; or, The Pupils of Marvel Hall.
Croquet, introduced from England, becomes popular with women and espedaily with young bourgeois lovers as a courting activity. Abraham Lincoln becomes President and South Carolina immediately secedes from the Union, soon to be followed by other southern states.
1860-1870
1860-1870
With increasing African American in-migration, the urban black population increases by 75 percent overall.
1860-1890
1860-1890
Largely as a result of efforts by the American Medical Association to delegitimize "irregular" practitioners such as midwives, 40 states and territories enact antiabortion statutes.
96 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1861
Jane Andrews (18331887): Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball That Floats in the Air, written to supplement geography lessons and to present different cultures while emphasizing the kinship of children throughout the world. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910), a pioneer in American literary realism and naturalism, one of the most widely read authors of her day (she produced at least 11 novels, more than 260 short stories, 50 essays, and an autobiography): Life in the Iran Mills, appears anonymously in Atlantic Monthly. Gail Hamilton (pseudonym of Mary Abigail Dodge, 1833-1896): Country Living and Country Thinking, urges women to consider careers other than marriage, and especially to consider writing. Julia Ward Howe (18191910), poet, dramatist, biographer, travel writer, and feminist, writes the lyrics to the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" (published in Atlantic Monthly, February 1862).
CONTEXTS 1861
Women Writers in the United States * 97 TEXTS
1861
Harriet Jacobs (18131897), writing as "Linda Brent": Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, the first true full-length slave narrative by a woman published in America.
CONTEXTS
1861
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: Maum Guinea and Her Plantation Children, the most popular of her contributions to the Beadle's Dime Novel series. 1861-1865
1862
Laura Brewster Boquist keeps a journal in 1862 that is published as Crossing the Plains with Ox Teams in 1932.
1861-1865
U.S. Civil War: When Cuban-born Loreta Janeta Velasquez's husband joins the Confederate Army, Velasquez also enlists under the alias Harry T. Buford, raising "his" own regiment. Velasquez was among some 400 women to fight as Confederates.
1862
Abraham Lincoln abolishes slavery. The Union army admits African American troops.
Rebecca Harding Davis: Margaret Hoivth, a novel.
Author Louisa May Alcott volunteers as a nurse in the Civil War.
Emily Dickinson (1830— 1886), at the age of 31, sends four poems to Thomas Wentworth Higginson.
In its first annual report, the Department of Agriculture describes the typical farm woman as a "laboring drudge," working
98 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1862
Elizabeth Drew Stoddard (1823-1902), TheMorgesons, first of several novels and a children's book.
1862
harder than her husband or any other farm hand or hired help.
1863
Anna Callendar Bracket becomes the first woman principal of a normal (teacher-training) school.
Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Pearl ofOrr's Island: A Story of the Coast of Maine. Jane Gould Tourtillott keeps a diary of her journey from Mitchell, Iowa, to California. Frances Fuller Victor (1826-1902), author of realistic dime novels, short stories, sentimental poetry, satire, history, and travel books: The Land Claim: A Tale of the Upper Missouri. Constance Fenimore Woolson (1840-1894), a novelist, short-story writer, poet, and essayist: Two Women, a long narrative poem.
1863
Memoir of Old Elizabeth, a Coloured Woman, a slave narrative and spiritual autobiography of a woman born in 1766; she is 97 when her story is recorded. Louisa May Alcott (18321888), editor of Merry !r Museum., a magazine for
Roller skating is introduced in America. President Lincoln declares Thanksgiving Day a national holiday.
Women Writers in the United States * 99 TEXTS 1863
girls; feminist and prolific author of seven novels for girls and two for adults and 16 collections of stories, as well as several Gothic thrillers under the pseudonym "A. M. Barnard": Hospital Sketches, an account of her Civil War days working as a nurse in an army hospital until contrading typhoid fever. Caroline Chesebro': Peter Carradine; or, The Martindale Pastoral and The Sparrow 's Fall, novels. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): Macaria; or, Altars of Sacrifice, a novel. Mary Jane Holmes: Marian Grey; or, The Heiress of Redstone Hall, a novel. Fanny Kemble (18091893), actress, diarist, and dramatist: A Journal of a Residence on a Georgia Plantation in 1838-39, a critical portrayal of the practice of slavery. Maria Jane Mclntosh: Two Pictures; or, What We Think of Ourselves, and What the World Thinks of Us. E.D.E.N. Southworth: Ishmael, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1863
The National Woman's Loyal League is founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, and Ernestine Rose as a means of assisting the Union in finding an acceptable political solution to the Civil War. Posters recruiting army nurses for the Civil War stipulate that they be at least 30 years old and "very plain-looking." The rights to the paper dress pattern patented by Eleanor and Ebenezer Butterick are preserved in Ebenezer's name. P. T. Barnum stages the marriage of midgets Mercy Warren and Tom Thumb in New York City, causing a sensation.
100 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1863
Harriet Prescott Spofford: The Amber Gods and Other Stories.
1863
Ann Sophia Stephens: The Rejected Wife. Susan Warner: The Old Helmet. Adeline Dutton Train Whitney (1824-1906), novelist, poet, and writer of noiifiction works for children and adults: Faith Gartney's Girlhood. It sells over 300,000 copies and establishes the theme she would revisit in many works, the passage of a young woman from child to adult. 1863-1864
1864
Louisa May Alcott: Moods, a novel. Caroline Chcscbro': Amy Carr, a novel. Jane Cunningham Croly (1829-1901): Jennie Juneiana: Talks on Women's Topics. Maria Susanna Cummins: Haunted Hearts, a novel, published anonymously. Mary Andrews Denison: The Mill Agent, a novel.
1863-1864
Diphtheria becomes a major health concern.
1864
Rebecca Lee becomes the first known African American woman to receive a medical degree, from New England Female Medical College.
Women Writers m the United States * 101 TEXTS
1864
Eliza Woodson Farnham: Woman and Her Era.
CONTEXTS
1864
Caroline Kirkland: The School-Girl's Garland. Mary Ann Webster Loughborough: My Cave Life in Vicksburg. With Letters of Trial and Travel. By a Lady. E.D.E.N. Southworth: Self-Raised, a sequel to Ishmael. Harriet Prescott Spofford: Azarian: An Episode. Ann Sophia Stephens: The Indian Queen. Mary Terhune, writing as "Marion Harland": Husbands and Homes, a novel. Susan Warner: Melbourne House, a novel.
1865
Alice Gary: Married Not Mated; or, How They Lived at Woodside and Throckmorton Hall, a novel. Caroline Chesebro': The Fishermen of Gamp's Island and The Glen Cabin. Mary Mapes Dodge (1830-1905): Hans Brinker; or, The Silver Skates.
1865
For every 100 women aged 20, more than five would be dead of tuberculosis by age 30, eight by age 50. The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution abolishes slavery. President Lincoln is assassinated; Andrew Johnson becomes President and
102 * Women Writers in the United States
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TEXTS
1865
Julia Deane Freeman, writing as "Mary Forest": Women of the South Distinguished in Literature, an anthology of biographical sketches and selections from 34 authors. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward, 1844-1911), who adopted her author mother's name, novelist, short-story writer, essayist, and feminist: Up Hill; or, Life in the Factory, a novel. Margaret Junkin Preston: Beechenbrook: A Rhyme of the War, a long narrative poem popular in the Confederacy. Elizabeth Stoddard: Two Men, a novel. Harriet Beecher Stowe: House and Home Papers. Adeline Whitney: The Gayworthys.
1865
survives a trial for impeachment three years later. Mary E. Surratt becomes the first woman hanged by the U.S. government; she is sentenced to death for her alleged part in the conspiracy to murder President Lincoln. The Black Codes are passed in the South, designed to replace slavery with a caste system that would differ little from that of antebellum days. The Ku Klux Klan is founded in Pulaski, Tennessee. By this date, 29 states have adopted some form of married women's property law. Vassar College in New York opens; it is the first full-program woman's college. The Nation is first published; it is still in print. The first cylindrical rotary press is invented. The first carpet sweeper comes into use.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1865
CONTEXTS
1865
1865-1899
Demorest's Monthly Magazine, edited by Jane C. Croly (known as "Jenny June"), is the first women's magazine to staple tissue-paper dress patterns in each issue.
1865-1899
1866
Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): St. Elmo, a novel. It is staged as a play in 1909, and filmed in 1914.
1866
Vivian Fine writes "Meeting for Equal Rights 1866," a musical composition celebrating the women's movement. The Story ofMattie J. Jackson, a slave narrative dictated to Dr. L. S. Thompson. Mary Lowell Putnam (1810-1898), novelist and abolitionist: Fifteen Days: An Extract from Edward Colvil's Journal. Metta Victoria Fuller Victor, under the pseudonym "Seeley Regester," publishes the first American detective novel: The Dead Letter: An American Romance.
103
Dr. Ann Preston begins a seven-year tenure as the first woman dean of a medical school.
Dr. Mary Edwards Walker becomes the first woman to win the Congressional Medal of Honor for her service as assistant surgeon during the Civil War. Congress enacts a Civil Rights act over President Johnson's veto and puts an official end to the Black Codes. Lucy B. Hobbs, an African American, is the first known woman to graduate from dental school (Cincinnati, Ohio) and the first practicing female dentist in the U.S. Elizabeth Cady Stanton becomes the first woman candidate for Congress. Cholera epidemic. Whites rob, attack, rape,
104 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1866
1866
and kill blacks and burn their homes in a race riot in Memphis. Black laundresses form the Washerwomen of Jackson, Mississippi's first labor organization. Sophonisba Breckinridge is born; she becomes an outspoken social worker and advocate for economic equality for women and blacks.
1866-1878
1867
Lydia Maria Child: A Romance of the Republic. Martha Finley( 18211909): Elsie Dinsmore, beginning a series that drew more than 25 million readers. Frances "Aunt Fanny" Gage (1808-1884), reformer, editor, author of children's stories: Elsie Magoon; or, The Old StillHouse in the Hollow. Judith W. McGuire: Diary of a Southern Refugee during the War. Sallie A. Putnam: Richmond During the War:
1866-1878
The New York literary magazine the Galaxy is published.
1867
Vermont becomes the last state to pass some sort of child-labor legislation. Dorothea Dix, social reformer who crusades for improvement of the shocking conditions in American prisons and asylums, tours the U.S. investigating mental hospitals and asylums, poor houses, and jails. Howard University in Washington, D.C., is founded. The first issue of Harper's Bazar appears; in 1929 it changes its name to Harper's Bazaar.
Women Writers in the United States * 705
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1867
Four Years of Personal Observation.
CONTEXTS
1867
Elizabeth Stoddard: Temple House, a novel. Harriet Beecher Stowe: Daisy's First Winter, and Other Stories.
The cable car is developed. Emeline Brigham patents a "womb supporter," a type of contraceptive pessary.
Frances Whitcher: The Widow Spriggins, Mary Elmer, and Other Sketches, published posthumously.
1868
Louisa May Alcott: Little Women, a novel modeled on her family. Alice Gary: A Lover's Diary. Lydia Maria Child: An Appeal for the Indians. Caroline Corbin: Rebecca; or, A Woman's Secret, a novel. Rebecca Harding Davis: Dallas Galbraith, a novel, and Waiting for the Verdict, a novel. Martha Finley: Elsie's Holidays at Roselands. Sarah Josepha Hale: Manners; or, Happy Homes and Good Society All the Year Round.
Pi Beta Phi, the first national fraternal organization for women, is established at Monmouth College in Illinois.
1868
The Fourteenth Amendment grants citizenship to blacks; here black women count only as women and are, as with all other women, denied suffrage. The first southern Jim Crow laws are passed, devising ways to insure that blacks could not use their new right to vote; many such laws remain on the books until well into the 20th century. Sorosis, the first women's professional club, is founded in New York City by a group of journalists and other career women when they are barred from attending a New York Press Club dinner for Charles Dickens. Susan B. Anthony is
106 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1868
Isabella Beecher Hooker: "A Mother's Letters to a Daughter on Woman Suffrage." Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley (1824?-1907): Behind the Scenes; or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House, a memoir including her experience as dressmaker to Maty Todd Lincoln. Estetle Lewis: Sappho: A Tragedy in. Five Acts. Eli/abeth Parsons Ware Packard: The Prisoner's Hidden Life; or Insane Asylums Unveiled, written after Packard's husband, a clergyman, has her committed when she disagrees with him on theological matters. After being a "difficult patient" for three years, she is released into her husband's custody as "incurable" until friends manage to bring the matter to trial. She is found sane alter seven minutes of deliberation and spends the rest of her life fighting for the rights of married women and the mentally ill. Elizabeth Smart Phelps (Ward): The Gates Ajar, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1868
appointed a delegate to the Democratic presidential convention. South Carolina grants its first divorce. Maiy E',. A. Evard patents a Reliance Cook Stove. Commercial yeast becomes available in stores. The Pennsylvania Academy of Art offers its first Ladies Life Class with a live nude female model. Ulysses S. Grant is elected President. The Working Woman's Association is founded. The Atlanta Constitution begins circulation; it is still Atlanta's newspaper today.
Women Writers in the United States * 707 TEXTS
1868
Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Folks.
CONTEXTS
1868
Susan Warner: Daisy, a novel. Frances Anne Rollins Whipper (1845?-1901), using the pseudonym "Frank A. Rollin": Life and Public Services of Martin R. Delaney, first known biography of a free black person. 1868-1870
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton publish their woman's rights periodical The Revolution.
1868-1870
Putnam's Magazine is in circulation.
1868-1916
1868-1916
Lippincott's Magazine, a monthly literary magazine, is published.
1868-1935
1868-1935
The San Francisco-based Overland Monthly is published.
1869
The Prohibition Party is founded.
1869
Harriette Newell Baker, writing as "Mrs. Madeline Leslie": Juliette; or, Now and Forever. Sarah Elizabeth Hopkins Bradford: Scenes in the Life of Harriet 'Tub-man. Caroline Wells Dall: Patty Gray's Journey from Boston to Baltimore.
St. Louis Law School becomes the first law school to admit women. Belle Mansfield, who read for the law on her own time, becomes the first practicing female attorney in the U.S.
108
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1869
A much-publicized dispute between author Mary Abigail Dodge (pen name Gail Hamilton) and her publisher Ticknor & Fields centers on Dodge's meager royalty rates (7 or 8 percent) compared with the standard author share of 10 percent: as a result of her inquiries into the discrepancy, Dodge is fired as editor of one of the firm's magazines, Our Young Folks, and is treated shabbily by her friend and publisher James T. Fields. Dodge appeals to other Ticknor & Fields authors for support and eventually takes the firm to court; she is granted a settlement but, still dissatisfied, decides to contract with Harper Bros, and ultimately writes a book about the brouhaha, A Battle of Books. Frances Ellen Watkiiis Harper: Moses: A Story of the Nile, a collection of poetry. Olive Logan (1839-1909), actress, playwright: Apropos of Women and the Theater. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): Vashti; or, "Until
1869
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony found the National Woman's Suffrage Association (NWSA); that same year Stanton becomes the first woman to testify before a congressional committee. Harriet Morrison Irwin becomes the first woman to patent an architectural innovation for a building. Disagreeing with the NWSA's tactics and programs, Lucy Stone founds the American Woman Suffrage Association. The country's first university press opens at Cornell in 1869. The first national women's labor organization, the Daughters of St. Crispin, is founded. Donaldina Cameron is born; she becomes a mission superintendent in San Francisco and rescues over 2000 Chinese women and girls from slavery. After the publication of W.H.H. Murray's Adventures in the Wilderness, out™
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1869
Death Do Us Pan," a novel.
709
CONTEXTS 1869
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): Men, Women and Ghosts, a collection of stories.
door camping as a vacation activity for both men and women becomes increasingly popular. The transcontinental railroad is completed.
E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Fatal Marriage, a novel. Ann Sophia Stephens: The Curse of Gold, a novel. 1870s
1870s
"Grandfather clauses" are added to many voting requirements as a way to keep blacks from voting. Isabella Stewart Gardner (1840-1924) leads a cultural salon sponsoring artists and musicians. Anorexia nervosa is first named and identified. Health reformer Dr. John Harvey Kellogg goes into the cereal business; Battle Creek, Michigan, soon becomes a mecca for those seeking better health through diet.
1870
Rebecca Harding Davis: Put Out of the Way, a novel.
1870
U.S. population totals 39 million. Sixty percent of all women workers are em-
7 / 0 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1870
Abby Morton Diaz (1821-1904), social reformer and prolific author of juvenile fiction: The William, Henry Letters. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Ginger-Snaps, humor. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): Hedged In, a novel. Rose Porter (1845-1906), religious novelist: Summer Driftwood for Winter Fire. Margaret Junkin Preston: Old Song and New, poetry. Memoir, Letters and Journal of Elizabeth Seton, Convert to the Catholic Faith, and Sister of Charity, Robert Seton, ed. Lucy Stone begins editing the weekly Woman's Journal, a position she holds until her death. Eliza Ann Youmans (1826- ?), textbook, science, and popular science writer: The First Book of Botany.
1870
ployed in domestic service jobs. Forty percent of black married women in the cotton belt are employed, mostly in field labor; approximately 98 percent of white women in the same region have no gainful occupation. Some 24 percent of black households have one working child under age 16, compared with roughly 14 percent of white households. The average black mother in the Cotton South has from six to seven children; 80 percent of black households are headed by a married couple. Smith College is established as a result of a bequest of Sophia Smith; it opens in 1875. Women represent 21 percent of college graduates. Esther McQuigg Slack Morris becomes the first woman justice of the peace. Ellen Swallow, a Vassar graduate, enters the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to pursue an advanced degree in chem-
Women Writers in the United States * 111 TEXTS 1870
CONTEXTS 1870
istry. She leaves after obtaining her M.S., claiming that her teachers prevented her from getting her Ph.D. hecause they did not want the first MIT doctorate in chemistry to go to a woman. Mary Potts invents a hot iron with a cool hand gripMargaret Knight patents a machine that folds and glues paper bags. In place of the shroud, dead bodies are increasingly arterially embalmed to prevent what had hitherto been seen as natural and unavoidable decay. Scribner's Monthly is first published; it soon competes with Harper's for readers. Philadelphia Colored Women's Christian Association, thought to be the first black Young Women's Christian Association, is founded. Kappa Alpha Theta, one of the first sororities, is founded at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana.
772 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1870
1870
Ada H. Kepley becomes the first woman to receive a law degree when she graduates from Union College of Law in Chicago. The first elevated train appears in New York City.
1870-1910
1871
Louisa May Alcott: Little Men, a novel, sequel to Little Women. Catharine Beecher: Woman Suffrage and Woman's Profession. Mice Gary: The Born Thrall. Caroline Chesebro': The Foe in the Household, a novel. Olive, Logan: The Mimic World, an account of backstage life from stage to circus. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): The Silent Partner, a novel. Harriet Waters Preston (1836-1911), novelist and expert on Provencal literature: Aspendale, a novel in
1870-1910
An average of 6700 southern blacks move north each year.
1871
Frances Elizabeth Willard becomes the first female college president when she is elected to head the Evanston College for Ladies. "The Great Fire" devastates much of Chicago. P. T. Barnum opens his circus "The Greatest Show on Earth" in New York; ten years later, a merger results in Barnum and Bailey's.
Women Writers in the United States * 113 TEXTS
1871
the form of essays and letters.
CONTEXTS
1871
Harriet Prescott Spofford: New England Legends. CeliaThaxter (18351894), poet: Poems.
1872
Nearly three-fourths of American novels published this year are written by women. Louisa May Alcott: Aunt Jo's Scrap-Bag, a collection of short stories. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper: Sketches of Southern Life. Elizabeth Avery Meriwether (1824-1917?), southern novelist, autobiographer, suffragist: The Master of Red Leaf a novel. Sara Willis Parton, writing as "Fanny Fern": Caper-Sauce. Harriet Beecher Stowe: Oldtown Fireside Stories. Mary T. Tardy: The Living Female Writers of the South, an anthology encompassing 175 authors. Anna Warner is the first
1872
Victoria Woodhull, New York stockbroker, newspaper editor, and champion of female suffrage, runs for the office of President of the United States as the candidate of the Equal Rights Party. Sixteen women, including Susan B. Anthony, are arrested in New York for trying to vote in the presidential election. An issue of Woodhull and Clafiin 's Weekly, the paper run by suffragist sisters Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin, is suppressed by Anthony Cornstock for obscenity and libel and its editors are imprisoned; the issue describes a sexual scandal involving Congregational minister Henry Ward Beecher of New York. Publishers' Weekly first appears. (Originally titled Publishers' and Stationers' Weekly Trade Circular, it
114
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1872
female author of a do-ityourself gardening book, Gardening by Myself. Susan Warner: A Story oj Small Beginnings. Sarah Chauncey Woolsey, writing as "Susan Coolidge" (1835-1905): What Katy Did, first in a series.
is?;
took its shortened name the following year.) Charlotte E. Ray receives her diploma from Howard University's School of Law and becomes the first known practicing African American woman lawyer in the country. A California statute requires that white students and Chinese and Japanese students attend separate schools. Jane Wells patents her invention, the baby jumper. Opium imports increase from 24,000 in 1840 to 416,724 pounds. Women are reported to be its primary users, usually ingesting it in "tonics." 1'yphoid ravages the Northeast and scarlet fever and measles are rampant. A great fire in Boston devastates, among other things, the plant of publishing firm James R. Osgood & Co. Montgomery Ward & Company opens as the country's first mail-order house.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1873
Louisa May Alcott: Work, a Story of Experience, a novel. Isabella Beecher Hooker: Womanhood: Its Sanctities and Fidelities. Sarah Gillespie Huftalen, a rural midwestern woman who works as a teacher and writes essays, poetry, and teachertraining guides, begins keeping a diary of her experiences and continues through 1952. In 1994 it is published as "All Will Yet Be Well." Julia C. R. Dorr: Expiation, a novel. Marietta Holley (18361926), humorist: My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet's: Designed as a Beacon Light, to Guide Women to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, but Which May Be Read by Members of the Sterner Sect, without Injury to Themselves or the Book. Eliza Jane Poitevent Nicholson, writing as "Pearl Rivers" (1848-1896), poet and journalist: Lyrics. Harriet Almaria Baker Suddoth, southern novelist writing as "Lumina Sil-
7/5
CONTEXTS 1873
Financial panic occurs. The Comstock Law makes it illegal to send birth control information, branded "obscene," through the mails. In Bradzvell v. Illinois, the Supreme Court rules against Myra BradwelPs attempt to gain admittance to the Illinois State Bar, arguing that it is not a privilege of citizenship and justifying its decision with claims of inherent differences between women and men; the case sets a precedent often cited to defend women's exclusion from professional careers. Susan McKinney is the first black woman to be formally certified as a physician, although Dr. Roberta Cole, who practiced in New York City from 1872 to 1881, is widely considered the country's first black female doctor. Dr. Edward H. Clarke, in Sex in Education, claims intense mental effort by women damages their reproductive capacities. Fanny Baker Ames cofounds with her husband
116 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1873
vervale": An Orphan of the Old Dominion: Her Trials and Travels, Embracing A History of Her Life Taken Principally from Her Journals and Letters, about a woman's experience pioneering in the Southwest. Celia Thaxter: Among the Isles of Shoals, prose. Adeline Whitney: The Other Girls, a novel about girls employed on farms and in cities.
CONTEXTS 1873
the first visiting social worker service in Pennsylvania. McCall's magazine, under the title The Queen, is published by a New York garmerit maker. The New York Tribune begins issuing its "extras," cheap reprints of stories and novels priced from fiveto fifteen cents, After seven years with partners, Henry Holt establishes his own publishing house I lenry 1 lolt & Co. Susan E. Blow becomes the first woman to open and teach at a public kindergarten. Amanda Jones invents a vacuum method for canning food. The first convention of women preachers is organized by Julia Ward Howe. Suffragists participate in a Centennial Tea Party in Boston to reaffirm that "taxation without representation is tyranny."
Women Writers in the United States * 777 TEXTS 1874
Catharine Beecher: Educational Reminiscences and Suggestiom. Miss H. Burton: The Lady's Book of Knitting and Crochet. Rebecca Harding Davis: John Andross, a novel. Julia Ward Howe edits Sex and Education, a collection of essays subtitled A Reply to Dr. E.H. Clarke's "Sex in Education," by prominent figures including Howe, Mrs. Horace Mann, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward), and Caroline Dall. Elizabeth Dennistoun Wood Kane: Twelve Morman Houses Visited in Suecession on a Journey through Utah to Arizona. Elizabeth Peake: Pen Pictures of Europe.
CONTEXTS 1874
Forty people attend the firstChautauqua Assembly held at Lake Chautauqua, New York, marking the beginning of the Chautauqua adulteducation movement; its lectures and activities ultimately draw millions when the movement spreads throughout the states and around the world, The Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) is founded; among its leading spokeswomen are Carry Nation and Frances E. Willard. The Woman's Home Companion, which first appears as The Home in Cleveland, Ohio, begins its 82-year ran.It goes on to be noted for its fiction, noniction,and illustrations before it folds in 1956. Mary Outerbridge, who introduced lawn tennis to the U.S., plays the first lawn tennis match on Staten Island. The first electric streetcar is in use.
118 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1875
Louisa May Alcott: Eight Cousins; or, The Aunt Hill, a novel for girls. Mary Baker Eddy: Science and Health. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): Infelice, a novel. Margaret Junkin Preston: Cartoons, a collection of poetry. Ilannah Whitall Smith (1832-1911), religious writer: The Christian's Se~ cret of a Happy Life, a religious bestseller for over 100 years.
CONTEXTS 1875
In Minor v. Happersett, the Supreme Court rules against the case brought by suffragists Virginia and Francis Minor, who argued for Virginia's right to vote under the Fourteenth Amendment, The Civil Rights Act passes, extending civil rights for African Americans to gain access to places of public accommodation and transportation; in 1883, after the failure of Reconstruction it is declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Michigan and Minnesota grant only widowed mothers of school children the right to vote, but solely on school issues. Maria Mitchell, longtime astronomy professor at Vassar College, becomes president of the American Association for the Advancement of Women. Wellesley College is founded in Massachusetts. The Johns Hopkins University is founded in Baltimore, Maryland.
Women Writers in the United States * 119 TEXTS
1876
Eliza Andrews (18401931): A Family Secret, a bestseller. Louisa May Alcott: "Transcendental Wild Oats," a sketch satirizing her experiences 33 years earlier with her family and others at Fruitlands, the Utopian community cofounded hy her father. Anna Dickinson, lecturer and reformer: A Paying Investment. In 1878 she makes her brief acting debut in the play A Crown of Thorns. She will go on to write her own play, An American Girl. Martha Finley: Elsie's Motherhood, continuation of the Elsie Dinsmore series. Helen Hunt Jackson (1831-1885), novelist and Indian rights activist: Mercy Philbrick's Choice, novel possibly based on her knowledge of her friend Emily Dickinson's life. Frances (Fanny) Raymond Ritter( 1840-1890), music educator, translator, singer, poet, and author, publishes a landmark article, "Woman as a Musi-
CONTEXTS
1876
On July 4, Matilda Joslyn Gage, Susan B. Anthony, Sara Andrews Spencer, Phoebe Couzins, and Lillie Devereux Blake present the Declaration of Rights of Women at the centennial celebration in Philadelphia's Independence Square. Harriet Purvis becomes the first African American woman elected vice president of the National Woman Suffrage Association. Mary'Baker Eddy founds the Christian Science religion; three years later, she opens the first Christian Science church in Boston. The American Library Association is first organized. The Dewey Decimal System is first introduced; it will be widely used as a classification system in libraries. There are 2500 libraries in the country with 12 million volumes among them. Their growth will be accelerated by Andrew Carnegie's generous endowment that begins this year.
120 4 Women Writers in the United States
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1876
cian: An Art-Historical Study," in Woman's Journal. In it she details women's largely unacknowledged accomplishments in the history of music. Ella Wheeler Wilcox (1850-1919), poet, novelist, author of over 40 volumes: Poems of Passion.
1876
Alexander Graham Bell invents and patents the telephone. Frank Leslie's Papular Magazine begins publication; it changes its name to the American Magazine in 1906 and survives for another 50 years. Juliet Corson opens the first known U.S. cooking school in New York City. Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is widely advertised as "The Greatest Medical Discovery Since the Dawn of History." The compound of black cohosh, iiferoot plant, fenugreek seeds, and other herbs in a 21 percent alcohol solution promises to remedy female complaints. Olivia Flynt patents her "Flynt Waist" or "True Corset," a nonconstricting and thus healthier device than its wasp-waistinducing sisters. Maria Spelterini, a professional acrobat, crosses Niagara Falls oil a tightrope. General George Custer is defeated at the Battle of Little Big Horn.
Women Writers in the United States * 727 TEXTS
1876
1877
Parthena Rood Barton: Experiences of a Practical Christian Life: In Form of a Journal. Mary Putnam Jacob! (1842-1906), physician and author of fiction and nonfiction: Question of Rest for Women during Menstruation, winner of The Boylston Prize from Harvard University for best dissertation. It combines classical background, research into medical literature, and questionnaires to women in all walks of life to demolish myths about menstruation and concludes that only in women have normal functions been considered pathological. Sarah Orne Jewett (18491909), novelist, shortstory writer, chronicler of New England life: Deephaven, a novel. Martha J. Lamb (18261893), historian, novelist, and writer of children's stories: History of the City of New York (vol. 2, 1880).
CONTEXTS
1876
Sarah Stevenson, physician and professor, becomes the first woman admitted to the American Medical Association.
1877
Rutherford B. Hayes becomes President. Reconstruction ends and Home Rule is established. Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce launch a fourmonth running battle to escape to Canada, but are forced to surrender just south of the border. Puck, a leading political satire and humor magazine, begins publication and folds in 1918. A nationwide railroad strike occurs. Irish Unionists known as the "Molly Maguires" are hanged in Pennsylvania. Helen Magill (White) completes her dissertation on "The Greek Drama" at Boston University and becomes the first known U.S. woman to earn a Ph.D. The YMCA in New York City offers the first typing
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1877
Miriam Squier Leslie (1836-1914), editor, travel writer: California: A Pleasure Trip from Gotham to the Golden Gate.
1877
The first public telephones and first telephone switchboard come into use.
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): The Story of Avis, a novel.
The first state reformatory for women opens in Massachusetts; Eudora Clark Atkinson becomes its first superintendent.
E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Bride's Ordeal, a novel.
The Washington Post is founded.
Susan Warner: Diana, Bread and Oranges, and Pine Needles, novels. 1878
Louisa May Alcott: Rose in Bloom, a juvenile novel. Lydia Maria Child: Aspirations of the World. Rebecca Harding Davis: A Law unto Herself, a novel. Martha Finley: Mildred Keith and Signing the Contract and What It Cost. Anna Katharine Green (1846-1935), novelist, detective story writer, poet: The Leavenworth Case, long believed (erroneously) to be the first American detective novel.
training course for women.
1878
A. A. Pope manufactures the first bicycles in the U.S. Over 200 blacks sail from Charleston, South Carolina, to Liberia, West Africa. In Reynolds v. United States, the Supreme Court rales against a Mormon defendant and upholds the constitutionality of the Morrill Act of 1862, prohibiting and punishing polygamy in the territories. The American Bar Association is formed.
Women Writers in the United States * 123 TEXTS
1878
Sarah Orne Jewett: Play Days: A Book of Stories for Children.
CONTEXTS
1878
Emma M. Nutt becomes the first woman telephone operator.
1879
There is a great exodus of African Americans from southern states to midwestern and western territories, especially Kansas or Nebraska (whereby the term "exodusters"); many settle as homesteaders or "sodbusters."
Frances Raymond Ritter: Some Famous Songs: An Art-Historical Sketch. Annie Trumbull Slosson (1838-1926), New England short-story writer: The China Hunter's Club. Harriet Beecher Stowe: Poganuc People, her last novel. 1879
Women authors, including Harriet Beecher Stowe, Rose Terry Cooke, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward), Annie Adams Fields, Julia Ward Howe, Helen Hunt Jackson, and Sarah Orne Jewett, are invited to an Atlantic Monthly birthday breakfast (Oliver Wendell Holmes's 70th) for the first time. Elvina Corbould: The Lady's Knitting Book. Sarah A. Emery: Reminiscences of a Nonagenarian. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): An Old Maid's Paradise, comic sketches, and Sealed Orders, a collection of stories.
Lawyer Belva Lockwood becomes the first woman to practice before the Supreme Court. Frances E. Willard is elected president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union and serves until her death in 1898. Mary Eliza Mahoney, the first professionally trained African American nurse in the country, receives her
124 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1879
Maria Stewart, African American author: Meditations from the Pen of Mrs. Maria Stewart.
1879
diploma from the school of nursing at the New England Hospital for Women and Children. Mary Foot Seymour establishes the first all-female secretary school in the country: the Union School of Stenography in New York.
Susan Warner: My Desire.
The first cardboard container is manufactured. The electric light bulb is invented. Within the next five years, electricity will become widely available. About 35,000 women are enrolled in various colleges and other institutes of higher learning in the U.S., comprising about one-third of the college student body. 1880s
1880s
The term "Boston marriage" is coined in the late 1800s to refer to a long-term monogamous relationship between two unmarried women. Africa is colonized by Britain, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. Nellie Cashmaii, known as "the Angel of Tombstone," works against
Women Writers in the United States * 125
TEXTS 1880s
1880
Martha Finley: Elsie's Widowhood, continuation of the Elsie Dinsmore series. Lucretia Peabody Hale (1820-1900), novelist, humorist, author of children's books: The Peterkin Papers. Jane Grey Swisshelm (1815-1884), journalist, abolitionist: Half a Century, autobiography. Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: A Bad Boy's Diary. Susan Warner: The End of a Coil.
CONTEXTS
1880s
violence, runs a boarding house where she raises several orphans, and campaigns against public hangings.
1880
U.S. population totals some 50 million, including 2,812,000 immigrants. An estimated 243,000 Native Americans are living in the U.S., representing, according to various historians, from one-fourth to one-tenth of the total population prior to Columbus's arrival. Virtually all surviving Native Americans are now encamped on reservations. Some 28.2 percent of the population is urban. Two and a half million women are working for wages; only 4 percent of employed women work in offices; most are employed in agriculture. By this date there are 2432 registered female doctors in the U.S. The Supreme Court overturns a statute prohibiting blacks from jury duty. African American workers in North Carolina are perhaps representative in
126 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1880
CONTEXTS 1880
earning from 40 to 80 cents a day, often for 12hour days; 35 years later, they are taking home less than six dollars a week. Nine out of ten southern African American married women between the ages of 21 and 30 have at least one child aged three or younger. Kansas is the first state to include prohibition in its constitution. Mary Cassatt (18451926), noted Impressionist painter who was instrumental in the introduction of that movement to America, first exhibits Woman in Black at the Opera. The publishing house of Houghton Mifflin & Co., which has its origins in the firm of Hurd & Houghton in 1864, is formed. William Randolph Hearst founds the San Francisco Examiner. The Dial magazine is revived and before it folds in 1929 -the poet Marianne Moore is its final editor—it is considered one
Women Writers in the United States * 727 TEXTS
1880
CONTEXTS
1880
of the most influential literary monthly magazines. Some 850 newspapers are in circulation; by 1900 there are some 2000. One in every 21 marriages ends in divorce. Canned fruits and meats first appear in stores. For the first time, women are permitted to work as U.S. census enumerators. James A. Garfield is the first presidential candidate to answer Susan B. Anthony's request for his position on woman suffrage (he was against, it).
1880-1910
1881
Rose Terry Cooke (18271892), short-story writer and poet, social historian of a fading New England culture: Somebody's Neighbor, Elaine Goodale Eastman (1863-1953): Journal of a Farmer's Daughter, prose and poetry. Martha Finley: Mildred and Elsie.
1880-1910
Life expectancy for rural blacks, both men and women, is only 33 years.
1881
A New York neurasthenist diagnoses an "American nervousness" in the culture at large. Domestic servants in Atlanta, protesting low wages, organize the Washerwoman's Strike. Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary, later Spelman Seminary (College), is founded.
128 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1881
Helen I hint Jackson: A Century of Dishonor, tract dealing with the U.S. governmcnt's injustices toward Native Americans, circulated at her own expense to every member of Congress.
CONTEXTS 1881
James A. Garfield is assassinated shortly after being inaugurated President, and Chester A. Arthur hecomes President, Nurse Clara Barton founds the American Red Cross.
Sarah Orne Jewett: Country By-Ways, a collection of stories.
Marion Talbot establishes the Association of Collegiate Alumnae (later renamed the American Association of University Women),
Susette La Flcsche (18541903), Native American writer and orator: "Nedawi," a children's story.
Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine — formerly Scribner's Monthly — begins publication; five years later Charles Scribner's Sons reenters the magazine business with Scribner's Magazine, which folds in 1939.
Harriet Lothrop, writing as "Margaret Sidney" (1844-1924), children's writer: Five Little Peppers and How They Grew.
The Boston Symphony Orchestra gives its first performance. 1881-1898
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, co-founders of the National Woman Suffrage Association, edit with Matilda Joslyn Gage the first three volumes, covering 1848-1885, of History of Woman Suffrage.
1881-1898
Women Writers in the United States * 129 TEXTS 1882
Emma Lazarus (18491887), poet and translator, aroused by Russian pogroms of 1882, writes Songs of a Semite, considered her best work; also, The Dance to Death, a play.
CONTEXTS 1882
Emily Edson Briggs becomes the first president of the Women's National Press Association. The Chinese Exclusion Act is passed and bars further immigration of Chinese laborers and families.
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): Doctor Zay, a novel.
The first issue of Lovell's Library series appears; these paperbacks, priced between 10 and 30 cents and printed on better paper and with clearer type than other cheaper reprints, represent social reformer John W. "Book-aday" Lovell's attempt to bring better quality writing to the masses.
Mary Elizabeth Sherwood (1826-1903), novelist, magazine writer, autobiographer: A Transplanted Rose. E.D.E.N. Southworth: The Unloved Wife, a novel. Harriet Prescott Spofford: The Marquis of Carabas.
Julia Ward Howe is elected president of the newly formed Woman's Ministerial Conference.
The Atlantic Monthly hosts a 70th-birthday celebration for Harriet Beecher Stowe. Susan Warner: Nobody, a novel. 1883
Sherwood Bonner, pseudonym of Katherine McDowell (1849-1883), local color short story writer, novelist: Dialect Tales. Sylvia Dubois, at the age of 100, tells her life story to Dr. Cornelius Wilson
1883
The Supreme Court rules that Native Americans are "aliens" and "dependents." Prominent activist Mary Ann Shadd Cary becomes the second known black woman to receive a law
130 • Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1883
Larison, who transcribes it phonetically. It is published as Sylvia Dubois, a Biografy of the Slav Who Whipt Her Mistres and Gand Her Freedom. Mary Hallock Foote (1847-1938), novelist and illustrator: The Led-Horse Claim: A Romance of a Mining Camp, one of the first novels to depict the West realistically. Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins (1844-1891), Life among the Piutes [sic]: Their Wrongs and Claims, an autobiographical work by a Paiute princess who gave more than 400 speeches across the U.S. and Europe to gain support for her people. Emma Lazarus's sonnet, "The New Colossus," is inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty. Laura Jean Libbey (18621925), known as the "working-girl novelist": A Fatal Wooing, one of some 80 novels during a 30year career. Mabel Loomis Todd (1856-1932), co-editor of Emily Dickinson's poems: Footprints, a novelette.
1883
degree when she graduates from Howard University. Caroline Earle White founds the American Anti-Vivisection Society. The Brooklyn Bridge in New York opens to traffic. William F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill") opens his Wild West show. Ladies' Home Journal is established and edited by the founder's wife, Louisa Knapp Curtis. Joseph Pulitzer purchases the New York World and inaugurates the practice of "yellow journalism." Moral crusader Anthony Comstock publishes Traps for the Young, which attacks half-dime novels and story papers as promoters of vice.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1883
Frances E. Willard (1839-1898), temperance reformer, advocate of women's rights, biographer: Women and Temperance.
131
CONTEXTS
1883
Constance Fenimore Woolson: For the Major, a novel.
1884
Sherwood Bonner, pseudonym of Katherine McDowell: Smvanee River Tales. Anna Davis Hallowell: James and Lucretia Mott: Life and Letters, by their Granddaughter. Helen Hunt Jackson: Ramona, a fictional plea for the rights of Native Americans. Sarah Orne Jewett: A Country Doctor, a novel. Mrs. Edward Mix (18321884): The Life of Mrs. Edward Mix, Written by Herself in 1880, religious testament by a free black woman from Connecticut. Mary Noailles Murfree (1850-1922), regionalist short-story writer: In the Tennessee Mountains, first published under the pseudonym Charles Eg-
1884
Married couples have an average of 4.24 children. Bryn Mawr College is founded. German scholar Friedrich Engels publishes Origins of the Family, Private Property, and the State, which argues that a woman functions in the home much as the proletariat functions in the workplace. Lawyer Belva Lockwood runs for President as the National Equal Rights Party candidate. She runs again in 1888. The country's first million-circulation magazine, Comfort, a mailorder journal for the home, offers subscriptions of four years for one dollar; it folds in 1942. The Mississippi Industrial Institute and College for
132 * Women Writers in the United States
TEXTS 1884
hert Craddock. When her identity is eventually revealed, the event causes national publicity, for her works have been praised for their "masculine" style.
CONTEXTS 1884
Chicana labor activist Lucy Gonzalez Parsons publishes "A Word for Tramps," which calls for immediate labor organization and reform, in Alarm, the weekly paper of the International Working People's Association.
the Education of White Girls of the State of Mississippi, later known as the Mississippi State College for Women, becomes the first women's state college. Martha Carey Thomas, professor at Bryn Mawr, is the first woman's college faculty member to become a college dean, Annie Oakley, given the nickname "little sure shot" by Sioux chief Sitting Bull, joins Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, and besides Bill, becomes its highest paid performer.
Eliza Roxey Snow Smith: Mormon poet, hymnwriter, and historian: The Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow.
The First Working Girls' Club is founded in New
E.D.E.N. Southworth:
York by Grace Dodge
Why Did He Wed Her?, a novel.
and 12 female factory workers.
Metta Victoria Fuller Victor: A Naughty Girl's Diary, a novel.
Grover Cleveland is elected President.
Susan Warner: A Red Wallflower. 1885
Jane C. Croly, writing as "Jenny June": Knitting and Crochet: A Guide to the Use of the Needle and the Hook. Elizabeth Bacon Custer (1842--1933): Boots and
1885
By this date, one-third of all books published in the U.S. are paperback dime novels. Biyn Mawr College beconies the first woman's
Women Writers in the United States * 133 TEXTS
1885
Saddles; or, Life in Dakota •with General Custer.
Sarah Orne Jewett: A Marsh Island. Mary Murfree: The Prophet of the Great Smokey Mountains, a novel. Susan Warner: Daisy Plains.
CONTEXTS
1885
college to offer graduate studies. The National Divorce Reform League is formed, designed to put an end to "easy" divorces and "lax" divorce laws. A group of Boston women create the first organized outdoor play area for children in the U.S.: the playground. Good Housekeeping is first published. Edmund Stedman publishes his anthology, Poets of America. The first trolley car is developed. The Borden Company begins delivering bottles of cold milk. Balloonist Mary "Carlotta" Myers and her husband patent a steering device for balloons. More than 1.5 million baby bottles are sold annually. Sarah E. Goode invents the "Folding Cabinet Bed" and becomes the first known African
134 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1885
1885
American woman to receive a U.S. patent. The publishing house D. C. Heath & Co. is established.
1885-1886
Clarissa Minnie Thompson: Treading the Winepress; or, a Mountain of Misfortune, one of the first post-Civil War novels by an African American woman.
1885-1886
1886
Louisa May Alcott: Jo's Boys, a juvenile novel and sequel to Little Women and Liltk Men, and Lulu's Library, a collection of stories.
1886
Frances Hodgson Burnett (1849-1924), prolific author of novels, short stories, plays, and works for children: Little Lord Fauntleroy. Rose Terry Cooke: The Sphinx's Children, short stories. Julia A. J. Foote (18231900): A Brand Plucked from the Fire, autobiography by an African American female evangelist (first copyrighted in 1879). Sarah Orne Jewett: A
1 laymarket bombings lead to the hanging of four protestors. Electric railways are first introduced. The American Federation of Labor is founded. The Statue of Liberty is dedicated. By this year there are 266 women's colleges, 207 coed institutions, and 56 technical and professional schools that accept women. Kansas grants women partial suffrage, allowing them to vote in municipal elections. In Yick Wo v. Hopkins, the Supreme Court declares
Women Writers in the United States * 135
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1886
White Heron and Other Stories. Catherine Owen (Helen Alice Matthews Nitsch): Ten Dollars Enough; Keeping House on ten dollars a iveek; hoiv it has been done; how it may be done again. Lilla Cabot Peny (1848?1933), poet, painter, and lecturer: Heart of Weed, a book of verse. Frances E. Willard: How to Win: A Book for Girls.
CONTEXTS
1886
discrimination against Asians in California illegal. Anna Howard Shaw becomes the first woman in the U.S. to hold both divinity and medical degrees. Louise "Lulu" Fleming is the first African American woman to be commissioned for career missionary service by the Women's Baptist Foreign Missionary Society of the West. Julia Richman becomes the first president of the newly established Young Women's Hebrew Association. The first linotype machine, which spelled the end of laborious manual setting for printing presses, is introduced at the New York Tribune. Some 1500 of the 4500 titles published this year are in paperback; 508 are dime novels. Coca-Cola, the first cola drink, is invented by a druggist as a remedy for headaches and hangovers.
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1886
Josephine G. Cochran patents a dish washing machine. Harriet Hubbard Ayer begins marketing her Recamier Preparations skin cream. Cosmopolitan magazine appears, selling for 12V2 cents an issue. The number of divorces rises from 9,937 in 1867 to 25,535 by this year.
1886-1895
1887
Nellie Ely (Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman, 18651922): Ten Days in a MadHouse; or, Nellie Ely's Experience on Blackivell's Island, based on her undercover work at a female asylum. Her later journalistic stories include exposes on baby-selling and matrimonial agencies and flattering portraits of Emma Goldman and Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Eliza Southgate Bowne
1886-1895
The social purity campaign succeeds in raising the age when women could legally consent to having sex from as low as ten in some states to between 14 and 18 years in 29 states.
1887
Congress initiates the allotment system by passing the Dawes Severally Act, which promises farms and American citizenship to Native Americans willing to detribalize. Susanna Medora Salter is elected mayor of Argonia, Kansas, making her the first woman elected mayor in the U.S. S. Weir Mitchell, renowned physician and au-
Women Writers in the United States 4 TEXTS
1887
(1783-1809): A Girl's Life Eighty Years Ago: Selections from the Letters of Eliza Southgate Bowne. Esther Bernon Carpenter (1848-1893), Rhode Island local colorist: South County Neighbors, short stories. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): At the Mercy of Tiberius. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (1852-1930), author of 20 volumes of adult fiction and six volumes of children's stories, most set in New England: A Humble Romance and Other Stories. Alice, French (18501934), writing essays, short stories, and novels as "Octave Thanet": Knitters in the Sun, a collection of short stories. Marietta Holley: Samantha at Saratoga; or, Flirtin' with Fashion, a humorous novel. Sarah Orne Jewett: The Story of the Normans, Told Chiefly in Relation to Their Conquest of England. Harriet Waters Preston: A Year in Eden, a novel.
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CONTEXTS 1887
thor of the "rest cure," proscribes activities like writing for new mother Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Oilman suffers a nervous breakdown after following Mitchell's cure and goes on to write about her experience in "The Yellow Wallpaper." Cecilia Beaux (18551942), painter and portraitist, first exhibits A Little Girl. She is also known for such works as Portrait of Bertha Vaughan, Sita and Sarita, Mother and Daughter, and New England. Anna Connelly patents the fire escape. Maria E. Allen patents a triangle diaper. Collier's magazine begins; it survives until 1957.
138
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1887
Margaret Junkin Preston: Colonial Ballads, Sonnets, and Other Versa.
1887
Lizette Woodworth Reese (1856-1935), poet, memoirist: A Branch of May, the first of her 14 collections of poetry. Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson (1825-1911), novelist, memoirist, suffragist: Captain Mary Miller. 1887-1906
1888
The Indian's Friend, founded and edited by Native American women in Philadelphia, begins publication; it includes poetry and essays. The first editor is Amelia S. Quinton, assisted by Helen R. Foote. It continues in print until 1951. Fannie A. Beers: Memories: A Record of Personal Experience and Adventure during the Four Years of the War. Mary "Molly" Moore Davis (1852-1909), novelist, playwright, shortstory writer, and poet who spends much of her life in New Orleans: In
1887-1906
Women are the plaintiffs in two-thirds of all divorce cases.
1888
Edith Eleanor McLean, weighing two pounds, seven ounces, becomes the first baby ever placed in an incubator. The Federation of Organized Trades is founded. Benjamin Harrison is elected President. The first modern deodorant is introduced. National Geographic Magazine begins publication.
Women Writers in the United States * 139 TEXTS
1888
War Times at La Rose Blanche, a series of fictionalized autobiographical stories.
CONTEXTS
1888
Margaret Deland (18571945), novelist and shortstory writer: John Ward, Preacher, a novel. Martha Finley: Christmas with Grandma Elsie. Parthenia Hague: A Blockaded Family. Grace Elizabeth King (1851-1931), New Orleans short-story writer and novelist: Monsieur Motte, a collection of stories. Amelie Rives (18631945), novelist, playwright, poet: The Quick or the Dead?, a novel.
1888-1890
1889
Nellie Ely (Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman): Nellie Ely V Book: Around the World in 72 Days. Rose Terry Cooke: Steadfast, a novel.
1888-1890
Edmund Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson publish their eleven-volume anthology, A Library of American Literature.
1889
Barnard College is established. College Settlement opens in New York, the first settlement house founded by women.
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TEXTS
1889
Mary Foot Seymour (1846-1893) launches Business Woman V Journal. Lucy Larcom (18241893), poet, abolitionist, anthologist: A New England Girlhood, Outlined from Memory, autobiography. Laura Jean Libbey: Leonie Locke: The Romance of a Beautiful New York Working Girl. Mary Logan (1838-1923), magazine editor, writer of advice books and histories: The Home Manual, an advice book. Matilda Barnes Lukens: The Inland Passage: A Journal of a Trip to Alaska. Bethany Veney, African American author: The Narrative of Bethany Veney; or, Aunt Betty's Story. Katharine Prescott Wormeley (1830-1908): The Other Side of War.
1889
Jane Addams establishes Hull House in Chicago with Ellen Gates Starr. Maria Louise Baldwin, superintendent at a predominantly white grammar school in Cambridge, becomes the first African American female principal in Massachusetts and the Northeast. Susan La Flesche (Picotte), of the Omaha, becomes the first Native American woman to earn a medical degree. She spends the rest of her life practicing medicine on her Nebraska reservation and working for the rights of her people. Journalist Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman ("Nellie Ely") sets out to beat Jules Verne's fictional "eighty-day" journey around the world and does so, completing her trip in 72 days, 6 hours, and 11 minutes. Belle Starr, outlaw celebrated in dime novels, is killed. Street and Smith enter the dime-novel business and soon become Beadle's chief competitors; the for-
Women Writers in the United States * 747 TEXTS 1889
CONTEXTS 1889
mer stays in business until 1950, in their final decades as publishers of pulp magazines. The first women's six-day bicycle race comes to an end in Madison Square Garden, New York. Munsey 's Magazine is first published; it remains in print until 1929 and in 1893 lowers its price to a dime per issue. Lilla Cabot Perry (1848?1933), poet, painter, and lecturer whose several one-woman shows in Boston and New York are invariably greeted with enthusiasm by critics and the public, paints Little Angele. Her style owes much to the Impressionists, whom she works to promote in America, but she retains a great deal of linear clarity and detail.
1889-1890
1889-1940
Miss Garrison, African American author: A Ray of Light.
1889-1890
1889-1940
At least 3800 black men and women are lynched in the former Confederacy and its bordering states; many more instances are unreported.
142 *
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1890s
1890s
Alice Austen (1866-1952), an amateur photographer, provides insights into private experiences of young women during the late nineteenth century. She documents Manhattan street life and Staten Island society in over 8000 photographs. The first cafeterias open in America. Shirtwaists are the fashion craze. The practice of tailing or ad-stripping, where a continued story is printed between columns of advertisements, is perfected in the Ladies' Home Journal and soon adopted by other magazines.
1890
A group of women authors in Brooklyn attempt to form an Authors' Protective Union; although the attempt fails, the following year the Society of American Authors is formed. Mrs. Octavia Rogers Albert: The House of Bondage; or, Charlotte Brooks and Other Slaves, a collection of female slave narratives.
1890
Ellis Island opens. United Mine Workers is founded. At Wounded Knee, U.S. troops kill 200 to 300 unarmed Native Americans. Wyoming enters the Union and becomes the first state with full woman suffrage: Esther Morris had led the fight for suffrage in the territory.
Women Writers in the United States * 143 TEXTS
1890
Eleanor Arnold: Miss Arnold's Book of Crocheting, Knitting and Drawn Work. Kate Chopin (18511904), novelist and shortstory writer: At Fault, a novel. Roberts Brothers of Boston publishes Poems by Emily Dickinson, a selection of 115 of her verses chosen and heavily edited by Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Mabel Loomis Todd. Although the edition is corrupt, the reception is warm enough to result in the publication of several hundred more poems over the next decade. Josephine Delphine Heard (1861-1921), African American poet: Morning Glories. Sarah Ornejewett: Strangers and Wayfarers and Tales of New England, two collections of short stories. Amelia Etta Hall Johnson (1858-1922), black religious author, novelist, editor, and poet: Clarence and Corinne; or, God's Way. In addition to being the second novel published in
CONTEXTS
1890
Bertha Kaepernick of Wyoming becomes the first female entrant in a rodeo. The National American Woman Suffrage Association is formed after the merger of the American and the National Woman Suffrage Associations. The General Federation of Women's Clubs is established; by 1900 some 150,000 women will join through various local clubs, making it one of the most influential women's organizations in existence. The National AfroAmerican Eeague is established. African American socialist welfare leader Janie Barrett founds the first settlement organization for African American girls in Virginia. The Daughters of the American Revolution is founded. The Mormon Church disavows its earlier sanction of polygamy. The median age of mar-
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1890
book form by an African American woman, it was the first Sunday school book written by a black author. Emily Pauline Johnson (1861-1913) begins a two-decade career performing her poetry in the U.S., Canada, and England, under her native name, Tehakionwake. Louise Chandler Moulton: In the Garden of Dreams, poetry.
1890
riage is 22.0 years for women and 26.1 for men. Black female illiteracy in the six largest southern cities is 50 percent. Literary Digest, featuring condensed versions of mostly newspaper articles, begins its 48-year publication. Review of Reviews, a monthly magazine containing both original and reprinted articles, appears. The magazine The Smart Set is founded; beginning around 1912 under new editorship, it is a leading journal featuring often derisive columns on "Americana" and selections from writers including F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Butler Yeats, Elinor Wylie, and Harriet Monroe. Louise Blanchard Bethune, the nation's first known woman architect, is the first woman elected to the American Institute of Architects. Peanut butter is first patented. There are approximately 4500 women practicing medicine in the U.S.;
Women Writers in the United States
TEXTS
1890-1895
Kate Field (1838-1896) founds and edits a weekly newspaper, Kate Field's Washington.
1890-1910
1891
CONTEXTS
1890
1890
Sophia Alice Callahan: Wynema: A Child of the Forest, possibly the first published novel by a Native American woman. Rose Terry Cooke: Huckleberries Gathered from New England Hills, short stories. Lucy A. Delaney: From the Darkness Cometh the Light or Struggles for Freedom, a slave narrative. Sarah Barnwell Elliot (1848-1928), southern author of comic fiction, often set in the mountains: Jerry. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: A New England Nun and Other Stories. Alice French, writing as "Octave Thanet": We All, a novel.
145
most of them were trained at women's colleges.
1890-1895
1890-1910
The mass-produced clothing industry takes off.
1891
Congress passes a law placing all immigrant decisions into federal hands and adds "polygamists" and "persons suffering from a loathsome or dangerous contagious disease" to its list of inadmissables; the following year it extends its 1882 restriction on Chinese immigration for yet another decade. Stanford University and the University of Chicago announce they are instituting full coeducation at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. Also in the early 1890s, Yale, Columbia, and Brown admit women to graduate work; Yale still refuses to admit women into the undergraduate college, while Columbia and Brown set up coordinate colleges for women undergraduates. Josephine Shaw Lowell is instrumental in founding
146 * Women Writers in the United States
TEXTS 1891
Helen Hamilton Gardener (1853-1925): Is This Your Son, My Lord? and Pray You Sir, Whose Daughter? (1892), companion novels that confront and condemn the sexual double standard.
CONTEXTS 1891
the Consumer's League and serves as its first president.
first
Addie E. Heron: Dainty Work for Pleas-lire and Profit. Emma Dunham Kelley (Hawkins), African American novelist: Megda.
first
H. M. Converse, Native American activist, is the white woman to become an Indian chief; she is named honorary chief of the Six Nations in recognition of her activism. The word "feminist" is used, in a book review in the Athenaeum.
Marguerite Merington (1860-1951), playwright:
The first international copyright legislation goes
Captain Lettarblair.
into effect.
Martha Morton (18651925), considered "dean of woman playwrights," founds the Society of Dramatic Authors when women are barred from membership in the American Dramatists' Club: The Merchant.
Annie Baxter becomes the firstfemale county clerk in the U.S. and the first elected female official in Missouri,
Mary Murfree: The "Stranger People's" Country.
Mary Cassatt's first oneperson exhibition in the United States takes place. According to the New York Times, "a rude strength, at times out of keeping with the subject, is noticeable, and takes away in a measure from the charm of femininity."
Lizette Woodworth Reese: A Handful of Lavender, poetiy. Annie Trumbull Slosson: Seven Dreamers, New England local color stories.
E. S. Edwards is the first woman to design a state seal (Idaho's).
Women Writers in the United States 4 147 TEXTS 1892
Gertrude Atherton (1857-1948), novelist, biographer, and historian: The Doomswoman, a romance set in Old California. Anna Julia Cooper (1859P-1964), educator and scholar: A Voice from the South: By a Black Woman of the South. Rebecca Harding Davis: Silhouettes of American Life. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Pot of Gold and Other Stories. Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935), a leading feminist theorist of her time: "The Yellow Wallpaper." Frances Ellen Watkins Harper: lola Leroy; or, Shadows Uplifted, the first novel by an African American to discuss Reconstruction directly. Marietta Holley: Samantha on the Race Problem, humor. Grace Elizabeth King: Tales of a Time and Place, local color stories set in Louisiana.
CONTEXTS 1892
The Populist or People's Party is organized, including woman delegates and speakers. Homestead Steelworkers Strike. Elizabeth Cady Stanton retires from the NAWSA. Ida B. Wells (Barnett), journalist, teacher, and community organizer, becomes a prominent activist in the anti-lynching crusade after three black men are lynched in Memphis. Composer, pianist, and musical prodigy Amy Mary Cheney Beach (1867-1944) becomes the first woman whose work is performed by the Boston Symphony. In Fall River, Massachusetts, Lizzie Borden is tried and acquitted for the ax murders of her father and stepmother. The publishing house of Putnam is founded. Vogue magazine is first published. Last year of publication of Peterson's Magazine.
148 * Women Writers in the United States
CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1892
Annie Nathan Meyer (1867-1951), Jewish champion of higher education for women, novelist, playwright, essayist: Helen Brent, M.D., a novel.
1892
The Sierra Club is founded. Fannie Farmer opens her School of Cookery in Boston.
Amelie Rives: Barbara Derm.fr.
Lena Sittig patents the first bicycle skirt.
Ida B. Wells (Barnett, 1862-1931), newspaper editor and anti-lynching and woman's rights activist: Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases.
The first game of women's basketball is played, at Smith College. Two hundred women in New York City celebrate "Foremothers' Day." Grover Cleveland is elected President (his second term, nonconsecutive). The Ladies' Home Journal announces that it will accept no more patent medicine advertisements.
1893
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Jane Field, a novel. Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826-1898), journalist, editor, and feminist activist: Woman, Church, and State. Louise Imogeiie Guiney (1861-1920), lyric poet, essayist, critic, biographer, journalist: A Roadside Harp.
1893
New Zealand becomes the first country to allow women to vote. Colorado's male voters are the first to grant woman suffrage. The First National Purity Congress is held. Queen Liliuokalani, after many attempts to overturn the "Bayonet Consti-
Women Writers in the United States * 149
TEXTS 1893
Mildred Hill, private kindergarten teacher, and her sister Patty Smith Hill compose "Good Morning to You," which eventually becomes "Happy Birthday to You." Grace Elizabeth King: Balcony Stories. Victoria Earle Matthews (1861-1907), African American short story writer and essayist: Aunt Lindy: A Story Founded on Real Life. Mary Alicia Owen (18581935), folklorist: VooDoo Tales, as Told among the Negroes of the Southwest, Collected from Original Sources. H. Cordelia Ray (18491916), African American poet: Sonnets. Annie Trumbull Slosson: Dumb Foxglove, and Other Stories. Amanda Berry Smith (1837-1915): An Autobiography; the Story of the Lord's Dealings with Mrs. Amanda Smith, the Colored Evangelist; Containing an Account of Her Life Work of Faith, and Her Travels in America, England, Ire-
CONTEXTS 1893
tution" imposed by the U.S. government and restore power to her people, steps down from the Hawaiian throne to, in her words, "avoid any collision of armed forces and perhaps loss of life." The World's Columbian Exposition is held in Chicago, featuring a women's exhibition with several buildings designed by and for women; one building includes large murals by Mary Cassatt and Mary MacMonnies. The frankfurter and the ice cream cone are first intraduced to Americans at the Columbian Exposition. Financial panic reigns after the stock market collapses. The Anti-Saloon League (ASL) is formed. Hannah Greenebaum Solomon founds the National Council of Jewish Women. McClure 's Magazine is first published for 15 cents an issue.
150 + Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1893
land, Scotland, India and Africa, as an Independent Missionary.
1893
The modern Associated Press (AP) is formed. The first successful American gasoline car is manufactured.
Ruth McEnery Stuart (1852-1917), author of 20 books and more than 80 magazine stories, known primarily for her southern local color and dialect fictions: A Golden Wedding and Other Tales.
Mary Cassatt paints The Boating Party.
Ida B. Wells (Barnett): The Reason Why: The Colored American Is Not in the World's Columbian Exposition. Frances E. Willard: A Woman of the Century; Fourteen Hundred-Seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life.
1894
Kate Chopin: Bayou Folk, a collection of stories. Martha Einley: Elsie at the World's Fair. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Pembroke, a novel. Mary Putnam Jacobi: "Common Sense " Applied to Woman Suffrage. Sarah Orne Jewett: Betty Leicester's English Xmas: A
1894
Anna Lea Merritt (18441930), Pre-Raphaelite painter, exhibits Watchers of the Straight Gate. Radcliffe College is officially established. The United Daughters of the Confederacy is founded. The Chap-Book, a highbrow, expensively printed art magazine lacking ad-
Women Writers in the United States * 151 TEXTS
1894
New Chapter of an Old Story.
CONTEXTS
1894
Amelia Etta Johnson: The Hazeley Family.
vertisements, begins publication and stays in print for four years. The Immigration Restriction League is founded and sets out to alert the public to the social and economic costs of immigration.
Mrs. N. F. Mossell: The Work of the Afro-American Woman. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin becomes the editor of the newly founded The Woman's Era, the first black women's newspaper. Founded in Boston by the New Era Club, it would become the official publication of the National Association of Colored Women. Harriet Prescott Spofford: A Scarlet Poppy and Other Stories. Ruth McEnery Stuart: The Story ofBabette and Arlotta 's Intended, novels. Celia Thaxter: An Island Garden. 1895
Katharine Lee Bates, Wellesley College English professor, writes lyrics to "America the Beautiful," which will become an unofficial national anthem. Eloise Bibb (Thompson, 1878-1928), African American author: Poems.
1895
The Bookman begins publishing a list of books in order of demand, listing the six best-selling books in 16 different American cities (works of fiction make up nine-tenths of the list); two years later, it institutes a national summation and in 1899, it be-
752 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1895
Sarah Knowles Bolton (1841-1916), worker for temperance, woman suffrage, and higher education, and author of a number of biographies and collections of biographical sketches: Famous Leaders among Women. Alice M. Brown (18571948), novelist, shortstory writer, dramatist, and poet: Meadow-Grass: Tales of New England Life, local color stories. Maria Louise Burgess, African American author: Ave Maria, fiction. Lctitia M. Burwell: A Girl's Life in Virginia before the War. Mary "Molly" Moore Davis: Under the Man-Fig, a novel set in the Southwest. Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson(18751935), African American short-story writer, poet, journalist, political and social activist: Violets and Other Tales. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Long Arm, a mystery novella.
1895
gins issuing the list annually. The first national conference of African American women, organized by suffragist and activist Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, is held in Boston. With her appointment to the Washington, D.C., Board of Education, Mary Church Terrell becomes the first African American woman to sit on a board of education. Cecilia Beaux becomes the first woman professor of art at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Faculty. Scars, Roebuck & Co., incorporated in 1894, opens its mail-order business; its first catalog totals 786 pages; by the turn of the century the company is selling approximately $10 million worth of merchandise a year. William Randolph Hearst purchases the New York Journal. New Hampshire is the first state to make the establishment and support of public libraries compulsory.
Women Writers in the United States * 153 TEXTS 1895
Sarah Orne Jewett: The Life of Nancy, a collection of stones.
CONTEXTS 1895
Emily Pauline Johnson, a.k.a. Tehakionwake: The White Wampum, a collection of poems.
Due to the bicycling craze (first in vogue in 1868 although bikes were not manufactured in the U.S. until 1878) skirt lengths go up an inch or two above the ankle.
Josephine Lazarus, Jewish American poet and essayist: The Spirit of Judaism. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): A Singular Life, a novel. Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902): The Woman's Bible, a critique of masculine bias in the Judeo-Christian tradition. Elizabeth Stoddard: Poems. Ida B. Wells (Barnett): A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States, 1892-1893-1894. Constance Fenimore Woolson: Horace Chase. 1895-1899
Rosa Sonneschein edits American Jewess, the first national Jewish women's magazine in the United States.
Charles Dana Gibson's drawings make popular the image of the "Gibson Girl" —upper-class, lushfigured, pinned-up long hair, pure white complexion.
1895-1899
154 *
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1896
Mary Eileen Ahem (1868-1938) begins editorship of Public Libraries, serving until 1931. Rebecca Harding Davis: Doctor Warrick's Daughters and Frances Waldeaux, novels. Fannie Farmer (18571915), prolific cookbook author, publishes the extremely popular Boston Cooking School Cook Book, the first cookbook to emphasize accurate measurements. Maiy F. Wilkins Freeman: Madelon, a novel. Sarah Orne Jewett: The Country of the Pointed Firs. Annie Fellows Johnston (1863-1931): The Little Colonel, first in a series of 13 books for children. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): Chapters from a Life, autobiography. Katherine E. Purvis writes lyrics for "When the Saints Go Marching In," with music by James M. Black. Ruth McEnery Stuart: Sonny, a novel set in Ar-
CONTEXTS
1896
Utah and Idaho allow women the vote. Plessy v. Ferguson rules "separate but equal" is a valid justification for segregation. The National Association of Colored Women, the result of a merger of the National Federation of Afro-American Women and the Colored Women's Clubs, is founded in Washington, D.C. Mary Church Terrell becomes its first president. William McKinley is elected President. Oxford University Press opens its American branch in New York City. In Savage v. Neely, the New York Supreme Court rules that authors may demand that their publishers give them access to sales records of their books. Pulp magazines are invented. Cheaply printed weeklies or monthlies offering fiction, quizzes, articles, and reader letters with prices starting at a dime, their popularity
Women Writers in the United States * 15J TEXTS
1896
kansas, one of her many about farming life, considered one of the best of the dialect fictions. Maria E. Ward: Bicycling for Ladies. Emmeline B. Wells (1828-1921), Mormon poet and journalist: Musings and Memories, collection of poetry.
CONTEXTS
1896
takes off after World War I when they begin to specialize (e.g., one of the most popular would be Street and Smith's Westem Story Magazine). New York City stages the first public exhibition of motion pictures. Maylrwin (1862-1938), known as Madame Laughter, appears in a brief film sequence that becomes known as The Kiss. Her filmed kiss with costar John C. Rice offends many people and generates the first debate over screen censorship. One of the most popular comediennes of the late 1880s, Irwin often spoke out against the exploitation of animals by entertainers. The first national women's tennis championships are held in Pennsylvania. Johnson and Johnson produces the first commercial disposable sanitary pads, called "Lister's Towels." Amy Mary Cheney Beach writes Gaelic Symphony, the first symphony composed by an American woman.
156
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1896
1897
Gertrude Atherton: Patience Sparhaivk and Her Times. Margaret Jane Blake: Memoirs of Margaret Jane Blake of Baltimore, Md. and Selections in Prose and Verse by Sarah R. Leavcring. Kate Chopin: A Night in Acadie, a collection of stories. Mary "Molly" Moore Davis: An Elephant's Track, and Other Stories, short fiction. Mary Weston Fordham: Magnolia Leaves, poetry. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Once upon a Time, and Other Child-Verses and Jerome, a Poor Man, a novel. Mary A. H. Gay: Life in Dixie during the War. Ellen Glasgow (18731945), southern novelist,
1896
Bicycling through New York City, Evylyn Thomas becomes the first person known to be run over by a car; she survives the crash with a broken leg to show for it.
1897
Lutie Lytle, upon completion of her law degree and admission to the Tennessee bar, begins practicing as one of the first black women lawyers in the United States. The first subway opens in Boston. The Alaskan gold rush is under way. Havelock Ellis publishes Studies in the Psychology of Sex: Sexual Inversion, which pathologizes samesex love between women as "inverted." Alice McLellan Birney founds the ParentTeacher Association (then known as the National Congress of Mothers) and becomes its first president. The American Negro Academy is founded, and Anna Julia Cooper is the only elected female member.
Women Writers in the United States * 151 TEXTS 1897
essayist, and short-story writer: The Descendant, her first novel, published anonymously. Anna Katharine Green: The Affair Next Door, a mystery introducing Miss Amelia Butterworth, the prototype for the elderly female sleuth. Lucretia P. Hale: Plain Needlework, Knitting, and Mending for All at Home and in Schools. Josephine Preston Peabody (1874-1922), poet, playwright: Old Greek Folk Stories. Lucy Maynard Salmon (1853-1927), historian: Domestic Service, analysis of household employment within a historical perspective. Harriet Prescott Spofford: An Inheritance, a novel. Ruth McEnery Stuart: In Simpkinsville, a local color collection. Lilian Whiting (18471942), prolific biographer of women, travel writer: After Her Death: The Story of a Summer.
CONTEXTS 1897
Victoria Earle Matthews (novelist) founds the White Rose Mission in New York City to provide African American women with lodging and to teach them self-help and survival skills. Gertrude Stein begins attending Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; she leaves in 1901 without attaining her degree. Maude Adams (1872 — 1953), one of the most popular actresses of her time, makes her first appearance in The Little Minister, a work authored by playwright James Barrie; they continue to collaborate until his death in 1937. McCall's Magazine is first published. The publishing house of Doubleday, McClure & Co. is established; in 1900 Doubleday splits with McClure to start his own firm.
158 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1898
Jane Cunningham Croly: History of the Woman's Club Movement in America. Margaret Deland: Old Chester Tales. Kate Drumgoold: A Slave Girl's Story, Being an Autobiography of Kate Drumgoold. Alice Morse Earlc (18511911), social historian: Home Life in Colonial Days. Sarah Barnwell Elliot: The Durket Sperret, a comic novel. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Silence and Other Stories. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution.
1898
The Spanish-American War gives the U.S. Guam, the Hawaiian Islands, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico; William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal and Joseph Pulitzer's World are credited and take credit for helping to incite the country to war. The Anti-Imperialist League is founded. Utah women become the first in the country to qualify for jury service. In Wilmington, North Carolina, white mobs murder some 20 to 100 blacks and terrorize the community. The first advice-to-thelovelorn column is written by Marie Manning for the New York Evening Journal.
Ellen Glasgow: Phases of an Inferior Planet.
The publishing house Dunlap & Grosset (later Grosset & Dunlap) is established.
Ida Husted Harper (1851-1931), journalist and suffragist, co-editor of History of Woman Suffrage with Anthony and Stanton: The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony.
The Michigan Board of Health estimates that one-third of all in-state pregnancies are artificially terminated.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1898
Louise Eleanor Hogan: A Study of a Child, a diary.
159
CONTEXTS
1898
Julia Ward Howe: From Sunset Ridge; Poems Old and New. Emma Dunham Kelley (Hawkins): Four Girls at Cottage City, a combination of spiritual autobiography and sentimental novel. Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson: Loom and Spindle; or, Life among the Early Mill Girls.
1899
Mary Antin (1881-1949), a Russian Jewish immigrant, writes of traveling through Russia and Germany to settle in Boston in From Plotzk to Boston. Gertrude Atherton: A Daughter of the Vine. Alice Brown: Tiverton Tales. Olivia Ward Bush (18691944), African American poet, playwright, and journalist: Original Poems. Kate Chopin: The Awakening, a novel that results in scandal and controversy due to its exploration of a woman's search for ful-
1899
The concept of lying-in disappears when the New York Asylum for Lying-in Women merges with the New York Infant Asylum. The National Institute of Arts and Letters is founded. Ellen Swallow Richards hosts a series of conferences devoted to domestic sciences at which the term "home economics" is used for the first time. Florence Kelley, influential advocate of labor reform and protective labor legislation, becomes the executive secretary of the newly established
760 4 Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1899
fillment; its author is shunned and she finds it difficult to publish afterward.
CONTEXTS 1899
National Consumer's League, Cienerva Mudge, driving in a New York City race, is the first woman automobile racer; her car spins out of control into several spectators.
Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson: The Goodness of St. Rocque and Other Stories. Martha Finlcy: Elsie in the So'iith.
Thorstein Veblen publishes his The Theory of the Leisure Class, which describes an era of "conspicuous consumption" and the wife's role as conspicuous consumer.
Mary E. Hitchcock: Two Women in the Klondike: The Story of a Journey to the Goldfields of Alaska. Sarah Orne Jewett: The Queen's Twin and Other Stories.
By the end of the century, the book trade is spending $5 million a year on book advertising.
Harriet Prescott Spofford: The Maid He Married, a novel. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton, 1875-1954), Chinese American novelist, autobiographer, biographer, and screenwriter: Miss Nume of Japan. late 1890s
late 1890s
Nine out of ten African Americans live in the South, 80 percent in rural areas; African Americans represent one-third of the southern population. Jackets for books first appear.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1900
Isabella Bird: A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains, a memoir. In the January, February, and March issues of Atlantic Monthly, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, a.k.a. Zitkala-Sa, or Redbird (1876-1938), Native American rights activist and daughter of a Sioux mother, publishes "Impressions of an Indian Childhood," "The School Days of an Indian Girl," and "An Indian Teacher among Indians." Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Concerning Children. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper: Poems. Pauline E. Hopkins (1859-1930), African American novelist, playwright, and biographer whose works often appeared in serial form in publications such as Colored American Magazine: Contending Forces: A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South. Mary Johnston (18701936), feminist and author of 23 novels, mostly historical romances: To Have and to Hold, the best-
161
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1900
An average of 3.56 children are born to each American woman. Women equal one-fifth of the American labor force, numbering some five million workers. Total population is 76,094,000; 3,688,000 immigrants have arrived since 1891. Women represent approximately half of the total U.S. black population of 8,883,994. Thirty-eight percent of native-born white working women, 21 percent of foreign-born working women, and 3 percent of black working women are employed in manufacturing. Women represent 60 percent of high-school graduates. Each year 55,000 divorces are granted; the divorce rate is approximately 4 per 1000 marriages. Twothirds of these divorces are granted to women, and the U.S. rate is more than double the highest European rate. There are nearly 5000
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1900
selling novel of 1900 and the first best-seller of the 20th-century. Harriet Prescott Spofford: Old Madame, and Other Tragedies, a collection of stories. Priscilla Jane Thompson (1871-1942), African American poet: Ethiope Lays. Emma Wolf, Jewish American novelist and short-story writer: Heirs of Yesterday.
1900
libraries in the country with total holdings of some 40 million volumes. The first known female proprietor of a publishing firm, Caro M. Clark, inaugurates C. M. Clark Publishing Company by issuing Charles Felton Pidgin's Quincy Adams Sawyer, which sells nearly a quarter of a million copies thanks to her extensive advertising campaign. The Foraker Act makes Puerto Rico the first U.S. territory not granted the promise of statehood or the protection of the Constitution. The 18-year-long policy suspending Chinese immigration becomes a permanent exclusion. W.E.B. Du Bois reports that 252 African American women have received baccalaureate degrees, 65 of whom earned them at Oberlin College. Carrie Chapman Catt is elected to succeed Susan B. Anthony as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. She serves for four
Women Writers in the United States 4 163 TEXTS 1900
CONTEXTS 1900
years, then is elected to a second term in 1915, serving until successful ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. With 63 74 working actresses in the U.S., women constitute 43 percent of the acting profession. One servant to every 15 households: domestic service jobs account for one-third of female employment, a drastic drop from 60 percent in 1870, precipitated by the boom in factory, office, and retail jobs. Half of all U.S. working women are farmhands or domestic servants. The General Federation of Women's Clubs refuses to accept Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin's credentials as a delegate from the black woman's organization the Era Club. For every 1000 white women there are 124 live births, down from 278 a century earlier. The Cake Walk becomes the most fashionable dance.
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1900
1900
Zelda Fitzgerald, one half of "the couple" of the Roaring Twenties, is born. "(She Was Only) A Bird in a Gilded Cage" is a popular U.S. song. The U.S. has approximately 5000 women doctors, 1500 female medical students, and seven medical schools exclusively for women. Infant mortality in the U.S. is 122 per 1000 live births. Average age at death is 47. Half of all births are attended by midwives.
1900-1920
1900-1920
The first electric appliances are marketed — including dishwashers, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators, toasters, and irons.
1900-1921
1900-1921
The number of silk stockings sold in America rises from 12,000 pairs to 18 million pairs.
1900-1930
1900-1930
With the rise of gynecology/obstetrics as a medical specialty and the passage of laws in many states outlawing mid-
Women Writers in the United States * 165 TEXTS
1900-1930
1901
Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, a.k.a. Zitkala-Sa, or Redbird: Old Indian Legends. Elizabeth Duarie Gillespie: A Book of Remembrance. Sarah Orne Jewett is made a Doctor of Letters by Bowdoin College. She publishes The Tory Lover this same year. Evelyn Key's The Century of the Child popularizes modern child development principles. Lillian Pettengill: Toilers of the Home: The Record of a College Women's Experience as a Domestic Servant, written by the author about her experiences as an undergraduate at Vassar, doing domestic work for tuition money. Alice Hegan Rice (18701942), novelist, particularly of the urban poor: Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): A Japanese
CONTEXTS 1900-1930
wifery, midwives virtually disappear by 1930.
1901
McKinley is assassinated shortly after election to his second term; Theodore Roosevelt becomes President. Eugene Debs's Socialist Party is formed. The American Eederation of Labor announces its support for federal control over child labor. A treaty establishes U.S. supervision over the building of the Panama Canal. Educator Mary Woolley begins her 36-year tenure as president of Mount Holyoke College. In 1930 she is named one of 12 greatest living women in America. Woolley maintains a longstanding and widely acknowledged "romantic friendship" with another Mount Holyoke professor, Jeannette Marks, which lasts from their meeting in 1895 when Marks was a student until Woolley's death in 1947. Physician Anita McGee
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1901
Nightingale, a novel.
1901
Mabel Osgood Wright (1859-1934), nature writer, novelist: The Garden of a Commuter's Wife.
founds the Army Nurse Corps. Sarah Jane Farmer, on a trip through Persia, converts to Ba'hai and founds the American Ba'hai movement upon her return to the States.
Edith Franklin Wyatt (1873-1958), novelist and short-story writer, advocate of working-class women, child labor laws, and woman suffrage: Every One His Own Way.
Anna Edson Taylor is the first woman to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel and survive. The Everleigh sisters open the world-famous brothel the Everleigh Club in Chicago.
1901-1902
Pauline E. Hopkins: Hagar's Daughters, a Story of Southern Caste Prejudice and Winona: A Tale of Negro Life in the South and Southwest.
1901-1902
1902
Gertrude Atherton: The Splendid Idle Ponies.
1902
Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson): A Speckled Bird, a novel. Ellen Glasgow: The Battle-Ground, a novel. Sarah Raymond Herndon: Days on the Road Crossing the Plains in 1865. Isabella Beecher Hooker:
Sieh King King, a 16year-old foreign student at the University of California, delivers a speech condemning the Chinese slave girl system and footbinding, and declaring men and women equal; she is thus the first known public voice for Chinese women's emancipation in the U.S. Martha Washington is the first American woman to
Women Writers in the United States * 7 67
TEXTS
1902
An Argument on United States Citizenship.
Helen Keller (18801968): The Story of My Life. Mary MacLane: The Story of Mary MacLane, By Herself. Helena Arkansas Mason, African American autobiographer: Life of Mrs. Helena Arkansas Mason. Georgia Wood Pangborn: Roman Biznet. Ruth McEnery Stuart: Napoleon Jackson: The Gentleman of the Plush Rocker. Journalist Ida Tarbell's expose on the Standard Oil company for McClure 's magazine serves as an exemplar for "muckraking" journalism. Susie King Taylor (18481912), African American autobiographer and nurse: Reminiscences of My Life with the 33d United States Colored Troops Late 1st S.C. Volunteers.
Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): The Wooing of Wisteria.
CONTEXTS
1902
be depicted on a postage stamp. Women in Australia are enfranchised. U.S. ends its occupation of Cuba and the Republic of Cuba is founded. "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" is a popular song.
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1902
Carolyn Wells (18691942), anthologist, author of 170 hooks, including children's hooks and over 70 detective novels: A Nonsense Anthology.
1902
Edith Wharton (18621937), prolific novelist and short-story writer whose works include novels of manners, gothic fiction and ghost stories, psychological realism, and social analysis: The Valley of Decision, a novel. 1902-1903
Pauline E. Hopkins: Of One Blood; or, The Hidden Self.
1902-1903
1903
Mary Austin (1868-1934): ardent and vocal feminist and spokesperson for Native American and Hispanic traditions, publishes first and most famous book, The Land of Little Rain.
1903
Mary "Molly" Moore Davis: The Little Chevalier, an historical novel. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Wind in the Rose-Bush and Other Stories of the Supernatural and Six Trees, collections of stories.
Ford Motor Company is founded. Henry Eord introduces the Model T in 1908, priced at $850 (the price subsequently decreases); by 1909, 19,000 Mode! T's have been produced. Mary Kenney (O'Sullivan), active in the American Federation of Labor and co-founder of the Union for Industrial Progress (1894), co-founds the National Women's Trade Union League. Agnes Nestor becomes the first woman president
Women Writers in the United States * 169 TEXTS 1903
Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Home: Its Work and Influence. Ella Rhoads Higginson (1860-1940), poet, travel writer, short-story writer, and novelist of the Pacific Northwest: The Voice of April-Land, and Other Poems. Mrs. Fremont Older (1875-1968), author of social melodramas and magazine articles: The Socialist and the Prince. Belle Owen: A Prairie Winter, by an Illinois Girl. Josephine Preston Peabody: The Singing Leaves, poetry. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): The Heart of Hyacinth, a novel. Kate Douglas Wiggin (1856-1923), children's author: Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. Edith Wyatt: True Love: A Comedy of the Affections, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1903
of an international labor union when she is elected president of the women's local of the International Glove Workers Union. Maggie Lena Walker becomes the first African American woman and very likely the first woman president of a bank, Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank in Richmond, Virginia, which she also founded. Ethyl Smith's Der Wald, the first opera composed by a woman, premieres at the Metropolitan Opera. Orville and Wilbur Wright achieve their first successful flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Gertrude Kasebier (18521934), an early woman photographer who often uses female subjects: The Sketch, a platinum print. Eva Watson-Schiitze (1867-1935), another early woman photographer who often photographs women: Woman with Lily, a platinum print. Nettie Stevens, biologist and geneticist, is the first
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1903
1904
Mary Austin: The Basket Woman. Alice Brown: High Noon, a collection of stories. Rebecca Harding Davis: Bits of Gossip, a collection of stories. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Human Work. Ellen Glasgow: The Deliverance, a novel. Mary Johnston: Sir Mortimer, a romance. Helen Reimensnyder Martin (1868-1939), novelist and short-story writer who chronicles the lifestyle of the Mennonites: A Mennonite Maid, a novel. Mary Alicia Owen: Folklore of the Musquakie Indians, anthropological study by woman made a tribal member in 1892. Elizabeth Stuart Phclps (Ward): Trixy, a novel. Gene Stratton Porter, (1863-1924), Indiana nat-
1903
woman to show that gender is tied to a specific chromosome.
1904
Anna Howard Shaw becomes president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA); she serves until 1915, when she becomes president emeritus. Deaf rnute Helen Keller graduates cum laude from Radcliffe. Mary Cassatt, the Impressionist painter, receives the Chevalier of French Legion of Honor. Mabel Boardman begins her 40-year tenure as head of the Red Cross. Evangeline Booth, daughter of the British founders of the Salvation Army, becomes the first woman commander of the U.S. Salvation Army. Mary McLeod (Bethune) opens the school that would eventually become Bethune-Cookman College in Florida with only six students —her son and five girls —attending. Hie American Academy of Arts and Letters is founded.
Womm Writers in the United States TEXTS
1904
uralist and novelist: Freckles. Jessie B. Rittenhouse (1869-1948), poet, critic, editor, teacher, and a founder of the Poetry Society of America, edits The Younger American Poets. Elizabeth Robins (18621952), actress, feminist, and novelist: The Magnetic North. Bertha Muzzy Sinclair (1871-1940), writing as "B. M. Bower," prolific writer of Westerns: Chip of the Flying U. Ida Tarbell (1857-1944), biographer, journalist, historian: The History of the Standard Oil Company. Effie Waller: Songs of the Months. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): Daughters of Nijo and The Love of Azalea, novels. Edith Wharton: The Descent of Man and Other Stories. Tryphena Ely White's Journal: Being a Record, Written One Hundred Years
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CONTEXTS 1904
The first offset press is invented and introduced in the U.S. The National Child Labor Committee is formed. The first public vocational school for young women, Trade School for Girls, opens in Boston. Theodore Roosevelt is elected to his first full term as President. A woman is arrested on New York City's Eifth Avenue for smoking a cigarette in an open-air car. The Broadway subway opens in New York City.
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1904
Ago, of the Daily Life of a Young Lady of Puritan Heritage, 1805-1905, Fanny Kellog, cd.
1904
1905
Frances Hodgson Burnett: A Little Princess.
1905
Mary Boykin Chesnut (1823-1886): A Diary from Dixie, published posthumously, covers the experiences of a Confederate woman from 1861-1865. Martha Finley: Elsie and Her Namesakes. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Debtor, a novel. Pauline E. Hopkins: A Primer of Facts Pertaining to the Early Greatness of the African Race and the Possibility of Restoration by Its Descendants—with Epilogue. Helen Reimensnyder Martin: Sabina: A Story of the Amish, a novel. Emma Bell Miles, an Appalachian woman who spent her life in the mountains, publishes a collection of the folk songs and music of the mountains, the first of its kind: Spirit of the Mountains.
The Niagara movement is organized on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls because U.S. hotels deny its black leaders, including W.E.B. Du Bois, rooms; it is the forerunner of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), founded in 1909. The social hygiene movement is launched in New York City with the formation of the Society of Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis. Pond's Extract is first marketed for cosmetic purposes. Wellesley College Professor of Psychology Mary Whiton Calkins becomes the first woman elected president of the American Psychological Association; when in 1918 Calkins becomes president of the American Philosophical Association, she becomes one of just three persons and the first woman ever to hold both positions.
Women Writers in the United States 4 173 CONTEXTS
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1905
Margaret Prescott Montague, Richmond novelist, short-story writer, poet, and essayist: The Poet, Miss Kate and I.
1905
Lillian Mortimer (?— 1914), playwright, vaudevillian: No Mother to Guide Her. Marie Van Vorst (18671936), social reformer, novelist: Amanda of the Mill. Edith Wharton: The House of Mirth, the novel that makes her famous. Ellen G. White (18271915), writer on religious issues and advocate of temperance and dress, diet, prison, and education reform: The Ministry of Healing.
1906
Maiy Austin: The Flock. Rachel Crothers (18781958), playwright and director: The Three of Us. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: By the Light of the Soul. Ellen Glasgow: Wheel of Life.
Jessie Tarbox Beals (1870-1942), considered America's first female photojournalist, also known as a portraitist and architectural photographer, moves to New York City and establishes a studio from which she works to record "the soul of New York" through pictures of Greenwich Village, Chinatown, the Lower East Side, Central Park, and the downtown city. She also travels to photograph scenes in other states and contributes to publications including the Ladies' Home Journal, Vogue, Town and Country, and the New York Herald. International Workers of the World (IWW) is formed.
1906
By this date, an estimated 150,000 women have had ovariotomies, the surgical removal of ovaries also known as "female castration." A devastating earthquake hits San Francisco, resulting in widespread fires. The first radio program is broadcast.
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1906
Emma Goldman (18691940), essayist, autobiographer, editor, lecturer, anarchist, and feminist, founds Mother Earth, a magazine that publishes political, philosophical, and literary writing, usually from a radical perspective.
1906
The National League for the Protection of Colored Women is established. The Pure Eood and Drug Act and Meat Inspection Act is enacted, largely as a result of public outcry following Upton Sinclair's The Jungle. Women in Finland are enfranchised.
Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): A Japanese Blossom, a novel.
Geraldine Earrar (18821967), world-acclaimed opera singer, makes her first appearance before an American audience. Alary Abastemia St. Leger Eberle (1878-1942), influenced by the Ash Can school of painting, which relies on realistic techniques but takes everyday and "lower" urban life as its subjects, exhibits her first New York street scene sculpture: Roller Skating.
1906-1909
1907
The Colored Woman's Magazine (1907-20) is first published and becomes one of the longestrunning periodicals edited by black women.
1906-1909
U.S. troops occupy Cuba.
1907
Immigration from southern and eastern Europe reaches its highest level: 1,285,349. Oklahoma includes prohibition in its constitution;
Women Writers in the United States * 115 TEXTS 1907
Virginia W. Broughton, black religious author: Twenty Year's Experience of a Missionary. Elizabeth Parsons Channing: Autobiography and Diary of Elizabeth Parsons Channing: Gleanings of a Thoughtful Life. Mary "Molly" Moore Davis: His Lordship: Romantic Comedy for 5 Males and 6 Females and The Neiv System: Comedy for 4 Males and 4 Females, satirical plays. Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson: Devota. Priscilla Jane Thompson: Gleanings of Quiet Hours, poetry. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): The Diary of Delia: Being a Veracious Chronicle of the Kitchen with Some Sidelights on the Parlour. Edith Wharton: The Fruit of the Tree, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1907
by this date only Maine, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and Oklahoma remain prohibition states. Mary Emma Woolley becomes the first woman senate member of Phi Beta Kappa. Florence Lawrence (1886-1938) begins her screen career at Vitograph Company. After joining Biograph when D. W. Griffith becomes their director, she becomes known as the "Biograph Girl." Lawrence is considered the first motionpicture actress to receive star treatment, thus initiating the studio star system. Kate Barnard becomes the first woman to be elected to a major state office — Commissioner of Charities & Corrections for Oklahoma. When her husband deserts her and her three children, Alice Foote MacDougall enters the wholesale coffee business. By 1928 her enterprises are worth an estimated $2 million. Feminist Llarriet Stanton Blanch is refused service
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CONTEXTS 1907
at a New York restaurant because she is unaccompanied by a male escort. The modern United Press (UP) is formed; in 1958 as a result of a merger with William Randolph Hearst's International News Service it becomes United Press International (UP1). By this date, one in ten American homes have electricity. Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas meet in Paris and become lifelong companions.
1907-1908
1907-1912
1907-1917
1907-1908
Lavinia Lloyd Dock and Mary Adelaide Nutting: History of Nursing, a 4-volurne feminist project.
The Gentleman's Agreement between Japan and the United States bars further entry of Japanese, and later Korean, laborers into the U.S.
1907-1912
1907-1917
Sixteen states pass sterilization laws preventing procreation among those deemed "unfit" and "undesirable": mostly nonAnglo-Saxons.
Women Writers in the United States * 777 TEXTS
1908
Eliza Andrews: The Wartime Journal of a Georgia Girl, a diary begun in December 1864. Mary Baker Eddy founds the Christian Science Monitor. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Shoulders of Atlas, a novel. Julia Ward Howe becomes the first woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Helen Reimensnyder Martin: The Revolt of Anne Royle, a novel about a Mennonite woman. Kate Alma Orgain: Southern Authors of Poetry and Prose, containing selections by 11 women and 15 men. Agnes Repplier (18551950), essayist, biographer, historian: A Happy Half-Century. Mary Roberts Rinehart (1876-1958), prolific novelist, detective fiction writer, and playwright: The Circular Staircase, the first in the "Had-I-ButKnown" mystery novel
CONTEXTS
1908
Mutter v. Oregon restricts the workday for women employed in laundries to ten hours. The decision is based on the assumption of women's inferior physical capacity as a justification for differences in legislation dealing with women and with laborers in general. Helen Turner (18581958), Impressionist painter, shows Mother and Child. The National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, the first professional black women's organization, is founded. It dissolves in 1950 when the American Nursing Association admits black nurses. The National College Women's Equal Suffrage League is established, with faculty and graduates of Barnard, Bryn Mawr, Mt. Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, and the universities of Chicago, California, and Wisconsin as delegates. William Howard Taft is elected President. The Bureau of Investiga-
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1908
tradition. From 1910 to 1940, she is America's most successful popular writer.
1908
tions (later the FBI) is founded. Mary Pennington, chemist and refrigeration specialist, becomes chief of the Food Research Laboratory of the Department of Agriculture. She had received a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1895, although, because of her sex, she was denied the B.S. she had earned. Her research leads to new, safer standards for food processing, storage, and shipment.
Clara Ann Thompson (1869-1949), African American poet: Songs from the Wayside. Margaret Floy Washburn, psychologist: The Animal Mind. Edith Wharton: The Hermit and the Wild Woman and Other Stories.
With the death of Mrs. William Waldorf Astor— famous for her "Mrs. Astor's ball"-"old society" in New York City virtually ends. Florence Nightingale Graham (Elizabeth Arden) opens her first beauty salon in New York City. General Motors is founded. Carrie Kilgore is the first known woman in the U.S. to ascend alone in a balloon.
1909
Jane Addams (18601935), social activist and autobiographer, winner of
1909
Sigmund Freud visits the U.S.
Women Writers in the United States * 179 TEXTS
1909
the 1931 Nobel Peace Prize: The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets. Mary Austin: Lost Borders, a collection of stories set in the West. Annie L. Campbell Burton: Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days, a slave narrative. Frances Boyd Calhoun (1867-1909): Miss Mmerva and William Green Hill. Sui Sin Far (Edith Maud Eaton, 1865-1914): "Leaves from the Mental Portfolio of an Eurasian," the first known autobiographical piece by an Asian American woman. Rose O'Neill (18741944), novelist, poet, illustrator: The Lady in the White Veil, a novel. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): The Oath of Allegiance, and Other Stories. Gene Stratton Porter: A Girl of the Limberlost, a novel. Gertrude Stein (18741946), novelist, shortstory writer, poet, autobi-
CONTEXTS
1909
The U.S. flag is planted at the North Pole. A group of social workers in Philadelphia publish their study Women and the Trades: Pittsburgh, 19071908, which shows, contrary to cultural assumptions, that the majority of women need to work to survive economically and that working conditions are far from safe. The largest women's strike in American history begins when 20,000 shirtwaist makers join to protest oppressive "sweatshop" conditions, long hours, and low wages; Mary Beard, feminist historian and suffragist, helps organize the strike. The American Home Economics Association is founded. Alice Huyler Ramsey becomes the first woman, along with three other female passengers, to complete a transcontinental automobile journey. Mrs. Ralph Henry Van Deman takes a fourminute flight, with Wilbur Wright serving as pilot, and becomes the first
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1909
ographer, playwright, important in initiating the linguistic experimentation that characterizes much of Modernism: Three Lives, published privately.
1909
The suntanned "Outdoor Girl" replaces the paler "Gibson Girl" as the fashion ideal as more and more women take up automobile driving.
Carolyn Wells: The Clue, the first of 82 mystery novels, most of which feature Fleming Stone, an academic sleuth.
The Negro National Committee is established; the following year, it chooses the name National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Helen Maria Wiiislow (1851-1938), novelist, poet, children's author, advocate of women's clubs: A Woman for Mayor.
1910s
1910
Edith Abbott (18761957), social reformer and educator: Women in Industry. Jane Addams: Twenty Years at Hull-House. Helen M. Angle: The Log or Diary of Our Automobile Voyage through Maine and the White Mountains, Written by One of the Survivors. Rheta Childe Dorr (1866-1948), journalist, war correspondent, feminist: What Eight Million
woman airline passenger in the country.
The Progressive magazine begins publication.
1910s
Cabarets become popular night spots.
1910
Total U.S. population is 92,407,000; 8,795,386 immigrants have arrived since 1901. Eight million women are working outside the home. Women represent 40 percent of college graduates by this year. One in every nine marriages ends in divorce. Only 26 of the country's
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1910
Women Want, which argues that the fulfillment of demands for women's economic, social, and political freedom is in the best interest of a democratic society. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: The Green Door, a novel. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: What Diantha Did, a novel. Corra Harris (18691935), Georgia novelist who portrays the South in a realistic fashion: A Circuit Rider's Wife, a novel critical of the hierarchy of the Methodist Church. Maggie Pogue Johnson, African American poet: Virginia Dreams: Lyrics for an Idle Hour; Tales of the Time Told in Rhyme. Theresa Malkiel (18741949), journalist, novelist, feminist, socialist: Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker. Margaret Prescott Montague: Mary Gary, filmed as Nobody's Kid in 1921. Christina Moody, African American poet: A Tiny Spark.
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1910
193 trade schools are for women. Women's participation in trade unions reaches a low of 1.5 percent. The first woman suffrage parade is held in New York City. The National Association of University Women is founded. Ella Flagg Young becomes the first woman president of the National Education Association. Only 1500 women attorneys are practicing in the United States. Nora Bayes, Irene Franklin, Elsie Janis, and Eva Tanguay become known as the Big Four of women headlining vaudeville acts; they earn nearly $2000 a week, in contrast to regular laborers who are making about $15 a week. The White-Slave Traffic Act (the Mann Act) is passed, outlawing the transportation of women across state lines for "immoral purposes."
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1910
Josephine Preston Peabody: The Piper, a play. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Ward): The Empty House, and Other Stories. Lavinia Honeyman Porter: By Ox Team to California: A Narrative of Crossing the Plains in 1860. Emily James Putnam (1865-1944), classics scholar and feminist: The Lady. Dora Knowlton Thompson Ranous: Diary of a Daly Debutante: Being Passages from the Journal of a Member ofAugustin Daly's Famous Company of Players. H. Cordelia Ray: Poems. Katherine Davis Tillman, African American dramatist: Fifty Years of Freedom; or, From Cabin to Congress; a Drama in Five Acts. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): Tama, a novel. Edith Wharton: Tales of Men and Ghosts.
1910
Congress enacts legislation prohibiting the entrance of immigrants employed as prostitutes or procurers into music or dance halls or into any other arena "where prostitutes gather." Ellen Emmet Rand (1875-1941), at age 18 a successful fashion illustrator for Vogue, becomes known for her portraits, such as In the Studio. Eva Watson-Schiity.e, photographer, prints Woman Playing Piano, a platinum print. The premarital pregnancy rate rises 23 percent since 1880. A Kinsey survey finds that only one out of ten noncollege women rely on withdrawal for birth control, while over one-third use diaphragms. Twice as many urban blacks are likely to die from tuberculosis as whites. In the southern states, 17,266 black women work as schoolteachers, outnumbering their male counterparts by more than three to one.
Women Writers in the United States * 183 TEXTS
1910
CONTEXTS
1910
The Camp Fire Girls is formed, becoming the first national interracial and nonsectarian organization for girls. Madame C. J. (Sarah Breedlove) Walker, black entrepreneur, founds the Madame C. J. Walker laboratories in Indianapolis and soon becomes the richest self-made woman in the U.S. through sales of hair straighteners and pomades to blacks. Atlantic Monthly magazine and Putnam's Monthly and the Critic merge. The first U.S. newsreel is produced. The saying "bring home the bacon" is coined. Fanny Brice (1891-1951), comic actress and singing star of theater, vaudeville, movies, and radio, begins appearing in the Ziegfeld Follies; she will star there until 1936. Congress is petitioned by 404,000 women demanding woman suffrage. Factory-made biscuits and quick cereals begin to be
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1910
1910
a feature in many American homes. Nan Jane Aspinall becomes the first woman to ride a horse alone across the country. With her first solo flight, Blanche Scott becomes the first U.S. woman to pilot a plane. Halley's Comet appears.
1911
Jane Addams: A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil. Frances Hodgson Burnett: The Secret Garden, a novel for children. Carrie Williams Clifford (1882-1958), African American poet: Race Rhymes. Anna Botsford Comstock (1854-1930), naturalist who writes many nature books for children and for popular audiences, as well as serving as illustrator and junior author on many of her husband's college textbooks: Handbook of Nature Study. Alice French, writing as "Octave Thanet": Stories That End Well.
1911
A fire in the Triangle Shirtwaist Company (New York City) kills 147 mostly female, immigrant employees. The National Urban League is founded. Theresa West Elmendorf becomes the first woman president of the American Library Association. Marie Curie wins her second Nobel Prize in medicine. Harvard philosopher George Santayana coins the term "genteel tradition" to describe premodernist culture and letters. Publishers' Weekly begins
Women Writers in the United States 4 185 TEXTS
1911
Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The Man-Made World; or Our Androcentric Culture; The Crux, a novel; and Moving the Mountain, a novel. Emma Goldman: Anarchism and Other Essays. Constance Gary Harrison (1843-1920), southern author of local color and satiric fictions: Recollections Grave and Gay, an autobiography.
CONTEXTS
1911
publishing its "Best Seller Consensus." The first successful movie magazine, Motion Picture, begins publication. The leftist magazine The Masses begins publication; in 1917, when it is barred from the mails during the war, it folds and quickly reappears as the Liberator (1918-24). The National Council of Women Voters is formed.
Mary Johnston: The Long Roll, a novel of the Civil War.
The National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage is established.
Elizabeth Lindley: The Diary of a Book Agent.
Jovita Idar de Juarez, educator and journalist, becomes president of the Mexican Feminist League, an organization working against lynching and for equal rights and education for women.
Mary White Ovington (1865-1951), author and civil rights worker: Half a Man: The Status of the Negro in New York. Edith Wharton: Ethan Frome, a novel. Edith Wyatt and Sue Ainslie Clark: Making Both Ends Meet: The Income and Outlay of New York Working Girls, which documents through case studies the unfair working
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conditions and poverty under which young working women were struggling.
1911
1912
Edith Abbott and Sophonisba Breckinridge: The Delinquent Child and the Home.
1912
Mary Antin: The Promised Land, story of a young Jewish girl's odyssey from Russia to life in America. Mary Austin: A Woman of Genius, a novel. Willa Gather (18731947), novelist and shortstory writer concerned with life on the frontier, the life of the artist, and questions of female identity: Alexander's Bridge, her first novel, published when she was 38 years of age. Sui Sin Far (Edith Maud Eaton): From the late 1890s through 1914, short stories and articles signed Sui Sin Ear appear in popular and prominent national magazines. In 1912, many of the stories by this first Chinese American author are collected in Mrs. Spring Fragrance.
Suffrage passes by state referendum in Arizona, Kansas, and Oregon; it is defeated in Michigan arid Ohio. Mabel Normand (18941930), comedienne and director, joins Mack Sennett and the Keystone Eilm Company, of which she will be the most popular female actress, later frequently pairing with Charlie Chaplin. In 1916 she forms the Mabel Normand Feature Film Company. With her appointment as director of the newly formed U.S. Children's Bureau, Julia Clifford Lathrop becomes the first woman head of a major government bureau. Juliette Low's Girl Guides becomes the Girl Scouts of America. Margaret Murray Washington, co-principal — along with her husband Booker T. —and director of Industries for Girls at
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1912
Corra Harris: The Recording Angel. Mary Logan and Mary Logan Tucker, mother and daughter historians: The Part Taken by Women in American History, including 2000 biographical sketches. Ethel Louise McLean: A Gentle Jehu in Japan, a memoir. Harriet Monroe (18601936), poet, editor, founds the important literary magazine Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in October. It provides the first major forum in the U.S. for debating issues regarding poetry. Monroe serves as editor for the next 24 years. Among its contributors are Edna St. Vincent Millay and Marianne Moore; it is still being published in Chicago by the Modern Poetry Association. Leila Amos Pendleton: A Narrative of the Negro. Nell Speed, journalist and author of pulp fiction and several series for children: Molly Brown's Sophomore Days.
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the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, becomes president of the National Association of Colored Women. On its first voyage, the British ocean liner Titanic sinks and more than 1500 die. Sixty-one-year-old American Annie Peck is the first person ever to climb Mount Coropuna (21,250 feet) in Peru; when she reaches the top she plants a banner proclaiming "Votes for Women." Woodrow Wilson is elected President. The first electric washing machine is marketed. Musical theater actress Lillian Russell patents her design for a custom dresser-trunk. Harriet Quimby, the first licensed U.S. female pilot, becomes the first woman to fly a plane across the English Channel. Texan Katherine Stinson, 19 years old, earns her pilot's license and goes on to earn fame for, among
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Gertrude Stein does "word portraits" of Picasso and Matisse for Alfred Stieglitz's Camera Work.
1912
other things, being the first woman to fly the mail, "loop the loop," and barnstorm in Japan and China.
1913
Grace Drayton, originator and illustrator of the "Campbell Kids," the highly successful icons of the Campbell Soup advertising campaign, begins the Dolly Dingle paperdoll series in Pictorial Review; it continues there until 1933.
Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): The Honorable Miss Moonlight, a novel. Jean Webster (18761916), novelist and author of children's books: Daddy-LongLegs. Edith Wharton: The Reef, a novel.
1913
Willa Gather: 0 Pioneers!, a novel. L. Louise Elliott: Six Weeks' on Horseback through Yellowstone Park. Mrs. Frances Joseph Gaudet: He Leadeth Me: An Autobiography by Mrs. Frances Joseph Gaudet. Ellen Glasgow: Virginia, a novel. Maud Cuney I lare (1874-1936), African American musician, poet, biographer, and playwright: Norris Wright Cuney: A Tribune of the Black People.
Fifty years after emancipation, black literacy has risen from 5 percent to 70 percent and black wealth is estimated at $700 million. Nonetheless, racism is still pervasive, if evidenced only by the fact that at least 51 blacks are lynched in 1913.
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1913
Mary Johnston: Hagar, a novel. Mary Logan: Reminiscences of a Soldier's Wife. Mary White Ovington: Hazel, advertised as a novel written specifically for African American girls. Eleanor H. Porter (18681920), novelist: Pollyanna. Nell Speed: Molly Brown's Senior Days. Anna Garlin Spencer (1851-1931), journalist, professor, and feminist: Woman's Share in Social Culture. Carolyn Wells: The Technique of the Mystery Story, the first book of instruction for writers of mysteries. Edith Wharton: The Custom of the Country, a novel.
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The militant Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage is formed by Lucy Burns, Crystal Eastman, and Alice Paul; they lead a march of 5000 women on Washington, D.C., and are attacked by mobs. Mahatma Gandhi, leader of the Indian Passive Resistance movement, is arrested. Pancho Villa gains notoriety as a bandit leader in Mexico. Rose Schneidermari, a Jewish immigrant, leads the "Uprising of the Twenty Thousand"; she later serves as president of the National Women's Trade Union League from 1926 to 1950. The Paterson Silk Strike occurs in New Jersey; Elizabeth Gurley Elynn and other members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) are involved. The International Exhibition of Modern Art, known as the "Armory Show," is credited with introducing modernism to the American public.
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F. W. Woolworth builds the country's first skyscraper, the Woolworth Building in New York City, out of the proceeds of the millions he has earned through his fiveand-dime stores; the building is 58 stories high. Vanity Fair magazine begins publication; it folds in 1936 and is not reissued until 1983. Kate Gleason invents mass-produced affordable tract housing. Georgia "Tiny" Broadwick becomes the first woman to free-fall parachute from an airplane. Cartoonist Rose O'Neill patents the Kewpie doll, which makes her a millionaire. What might be deemed the world's first nude calendar appears. It features a reproduction of a nude painting and incites calls for censorship and removal. The Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference is founded.
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The first act of the new Alaska territory's legislature is to pass a woman suffrage bill.
When British suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst arrives in the U.S., the Ellis Island Board orders her to be deported; President Wilson intervenes.
1914
Margaret Anderson (1886-1973) founds Little Review with the aim of publishing creative criticism that is "fresh and constructive, and intelligent from the artist's point of view"; the first number features articles on feminism, Nietzsche, and psychoanalysis. Contributors would include Amy Lowell, Emma Goldman, Dorothy Richardson, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, and H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), among others. Anderson continues as editor until 1923. Mary Antin: They Who Knock at Our Gates: A Complete Gospel of Immigration.
Effie T. Battle, African American author: Gleanings from Dixie Land in Ten Poems.
1914
Montana and Nevada pass state referendums on woman suffrage; Missouri, Ohio, Nebraska, and North and South Dakota defeat similar referendums. Mrs. Frank Leslie, publisher of Leslie's Weekly, leaves Carrie Chapman Catt $2 million to help further the woman suffrage cause. The Panama Canal opens. The Smith-Lever Act establishes federal funding for the teaching of home economics in coeducational state colleges and universities. World War I begins. The U.S. Children's Bureau publishes and distributes its enormously influential pamphlet Infant
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Olivia Ward Bush: Driftwood, poetry and prose.
Care, describing women's responsibility for their family's health and wellbeing and stressing that they could insure this only by following to the letter the instruction of experts. The pamphlet is still in print today.
Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson: Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence: The Best Speeches Delivered by the Negro from the Days of Slavery to the Present Time.
A group of publishers launches a "Revival of Reading" Campaign, one of the most successful cooperative book advertising efforts to date.
Emma Goldman: The Social Significance of the Modem Drama. Inez Haynes Irwin (18731970), novelist, writer of stories for girls, and suffragist: Angel Island, one of the earliest science fiction novels by a U.S. woman.
Polish-born Helena Rubinstein, who studied both medicine and dermatology, opens her first beauty salon in New York. With salons in that city and in London and Paris, Rubenstein eventually becomes one of the wealthiest women in the world.
Mary Johnston: The Witch, a novel promoting religious and intellectual freedom for women.
The 4-H Club-I lead, Heart, Hands, and Home (later Health) —becomes a national organization.
Maria Cristina Mena, a.k.a. Maria Chambers, Chicana short-story writer: "The Vine Leaf," one of several short stories and sketches of Mexican life she publishes in
The first national figureskating tournament is held in Connecticut.
Alice Brown: Children of the Earth: A Play of New England, winner of the Winthrop Ames Prize.
1914
The Neiv Republic magazine begins publication.
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1914
The Century and American in the early 1900s.
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1914
Louella Parsons (18811972) becomes the first woman to serve as movie critic for a major paper, the New York Morning Telegraph.
Cosmetic industry sales total $17 million. The waltz and the twostep replace the cotillion as the most popular dances in America's ballrooms; with "ragtime" music comes the craze for "animal" dances — including the fox trot, the grizzly bear, the turkey trot, the bunny hug—which scandalize conservatives and are execrated in press and pulpit.
Margaret Sanger edits The Woman Rebel, a monthly journal covering socialist and anarchist concerns. Elsie Singmaster (18791958), novelist of the Pennsylvania Dutch: Katy Gaumer.
The daughter of the woman who organized the first Mother's Day persuades Congress to designate the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day.
Gertrude Stein: Tender Buttons.
Polly Jacob patents her invention, the "backless brassiere."
1915
1915
Willa Gather: The Song of the Lark, a novel.
Anarchist Emma Goldman is arrested in Portland, Oregon, for lecturing on sexual freedom and contraception; a circuit court judge sets aside her conviction and condemns the "prudery" he believes so evident throughout the U.S.
Adelaide Crapsey (18781914), inventor of the cinquain, a five-line poetic
A federal prosecutor drops charges against Margaret Sanger for violating
Annie Heloise Abel (1873-1947): The American Indian as Slaveholder and Secessionist: An Omitted Chapter in the Diplomatic History of the Confederacy.
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form: Verse, published posthumously. Isabel Alice Hartley Crawford: Kioiva: The History of a Blanket Indian Mission, a memoir. Alice Gerstenberg (18851972), playwright: Overtones opens as a one-act play in New York. Expanded to three acts in 1922, it is seen as a forerunner of later psychological drama. Charlotte Perkins Oilman: Herland, Utopian novel. Anna Katharine Green: The Golden Slipper and Other Problems for Violet Strange, a collection of mystery stories introducing Violet Strange, the prototype for girl detectives such as Nancy Drew. Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): Me, anonymously published autobiography.
1915
the Comstock Law by distributing pamphlets on birth control through the mail; she is arrested again in 1916 in Brooklyn for opening a birth control clinic and this time is sent to jail. Sixty-one women die for every 10,000 live births. Theda Bara (1885-1955) appears in A Fool There Was, which establishes her as a star and brings a new word, "vamp," into use. Bara goes on to play the varnp in 39 more films. Nevada passes its "quickie" divorce law. Mary Coffin (Ware) Dennett founds the National Birth Control League, the first American birth control organization. It becomes the Voluntary Parenthood League in 1918. Jane Addams, of Hull House fame, forms a nationwide Woman's Peace Party, arguing that women need the vote and equal government representation in order to oppose war effectively.
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Two influential books appear that, among other things, help to shape the "canon" of American literature, defining its great writers as predominantly white male New Englanders: Fred Lewis Pattee's History of American Literature Since 1870 and Van Wyck Brooks's America's Coming of Age. Anne W. Brigman (18681950), photographer who often focuses on women subjects, produces The West Wind, a gelatin silver print. Geraldine Farrar becomes the first opera star to appear in Hollywood films, including Carmen. Susan Glaspell, her husband George Cram Cook, and Mary Heaton Vorse found Provincetown Players, an influential, often experimental drama group. Together they write and stage numerous plays, including in this year Suppressed Desires, a satiric look at marriage and the fascination with Freud. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., is founded; Willa Gather is to become Knopf's favor-
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ite author (perhaps because she never requested an advance and only once asked for a [1 percent] royalty raise). A German U-boat sinks the British passenger ship Lusitania, arousing American public indignation. The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, now the oldest active peace organization in the U.S., is established. The first transcontinental phone call occurs. A marketing campaign begins in Harper's Bazar (as it was known then) to get women to shave underarm hair when sleeveless dresses come into style (leg-shaving comes later and is cemented during World War II when Betty Grable's "pin-up" shows off her smooth-shaven legs). With the invention of the metal lipstick container, the mass production and purchase of lipsticks begins. The NAACP petitions the Supreme Court and
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1915
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wins when the court rules unconstitutional the grandfather clause used to prevent blacks from voting. D. W. Griffith's film The Birth of a Nation opens; the NAACP protests its stereotypical representation of African Americans.
1915-1920
1916
Jane Addams: The Long Road of Woman's Memory.
Alice Stone Blackwell, editor of Woman's Journal and a nationwide newspaper columnist, prepares notes for Woodrow Wilson's speech declaring support for woman suffrage. H.D. (Hilda Doolittle, 1886-1961): Sea Garden, volume of imagist poetry. Ellen Glasgow: Life and Gabriella: The Story of a Woman's Courage, described by many as her most feminist work. Susan Glaspell (18761948), prolific author of plays and fiction, feminist, co-founder of the Provincetown Playhouse:
1915-1920
African Americans migrate to northern cities in great numbers.
1916
Suffragists Alice Paul and Lucy Burns establish the National Woman's Party in the 12 states that have already given women presidential suffrage. This militant outgrowth of the NAWSA and the Congressional Union opposes Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic ticket in that year's election because its leaders blame Wilson for the failure to pass a federal suffrage amendment. Margaret Sanger opens the first U.S. birth control clinic in New York City. The journal The Seven Arts begins publication. Wilson is re-elected President on a peace platform.
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Trifles, the first play in which Glaspell uses the technique she makes famous of the "off-stage protagonist," in this case a woman accused of murdering her harsh husband but protected by a female community. Corra Harris: A Circuit Rider's Widow. Grace Elizabeth King: The Pleasant Ways of St. Medard, a novel. Eve Merriam's The Inner City Mother Goose, a book of satirical adult nursery rhymes, is investigated by a grand jury in New York; it also undergoes censure in Baltimore, San Francisco, and Minneapolis. Margaret Sanger (18791966), pioneer birth control advocate, establishes Birth Control Review. Edith Wharton: Xingu and Other Stories.
1916
Pancho Villa attacks the U.S., which retaliates by invading Mexico. The first general federal legislation on child labor is passed; the act prohibits interstate shipments of goods manufactured in places where children under age 14 have been employed or where children between the ages of 14 and 16 have labored more than eight-hour days or five-day weeks or at night; in 1918, the Supreme Court rules that it represents an undue infringement on states' rights. Mary B. Talbert becomes president of the National Association of Colored Women. Henrietta "Hetty" Green, known as the "Witch of Wall Street," possibly the nation's richest woman, dies; although she had inherited a large sum of money, she substantially increased it through savvy investments and speculations. Hazel Hook Walt invents the bobby pin, although a manufacturer slightly al-
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ters the design and beats her to the patent. Shalimar perfume is invented. A group of authors, artists, editors, illustrators, and publishers form "The Vigilantes," war supporters who volunteer their skills on behalf of disseminating "patriotic publicity"; Gertrude Atherton is one of the few women associated with the organization.
1917
1917
Thetta Quay Franks: Household Organization for War Service: America Expects Every Woman to Do Her Duty.
Congress passes an immigration law over President Wilson's veto, which excludes adults unable to read some language and maps out an "Asiatic Barred Zone" that completely excludes all Asiatic people excepting those already excluded (the Chinese) or severely restricted (the Japanese). It also excludes members of revolutionary organizations and demands the immediate deportation of resident aliens who are caught speaking about revolution or sabotage at any point after entry.
Grace Livingston Hill (1865-1947), author of 107 works, including con-
Three women from Canada, Mrs. Spinks, Mrs. W. C. Tyler, and Mrs.
Elsa Barsaloux: Priscilla War Work Book: Comforts for Soldiers and Sailors. Dorothy Canfield Fisher (1879-1958), novelist, short-story writer, critic, translator, and advocate of Montessori education: Understood Betsy, a children's book. Mary Hallock Foote: Edith Bonham.
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temporary romance, historical romance, mystery, and nonfiction: The Witness. Mary Johnston: The Wanderers, a novel promoting women's rights. Jeanette Lee: The Green Jacket, the first of several mysteries featuring Millicent Newberry, possibly the first female fictional sleuth to head her own detective agency. Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950), poet, fiction writer, and dramatist associated with the Provincetown Players; also a social activist considered by her generation the epitome of the "New Woman": Renascence and Other Poems.
1917
Wylie, become the first women delegates to the electoral college. Jeannette Pickering Rankin, suffragist and pacifist, is sworn in as the first woman ever to serve in Congress. U.S. enters World War I. American Women's Hospitals Service is founded; it is a WWI organization designed to utilize the skills of female doctors. One thousand women picket the White House demanding suffrage as part of the National Woman's Party's campaign of militancy.
Laura E. Richards and Maud I lowe Elliott: Julia Ward Howe, winner of the first Pulitzer Prize given for biography.
Beginning in this year, as many as 216 suffragists are illegally arrested for their protest activities; 97 of them are sentenced to as many as six months in either the infamous D.C. jail or the equally infamous Occoqua, Virginia, workhouse. In 1918, the D.C. Court of Appeals overturns their convictions and sentences.
Elizabeth G. Stern, Jewish American author: My Mother and I.
Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Arkansas state
Elsie Clews Parsons (1875P-1941), anthropologist: Notes on Zuni and Social Rule.
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Sara Teasdale (18841933), poet: Love Songs. Edith Wharton: Summer, a novel. Edith Wyatt: Great Companions, a collection of essays by the novelist and social activist.
CONTEXTS 1917
legislatures grant woman suffrage. By state referendum, New York passes woman suffrage; also by state referendum Ohio rescinds the suffrage the legislature had granted previously. North Dakota's legislature grants presidential suffrage only. Women in Russia and Mexico are enfranchised. At a small bookshop in New York, 21 women employed in the book and publishing business meet and organize the Woman's National Association of Booksellers and Publishers. When Margaret Anderson, editor of The Little Review, runs an antiwar story by Wyndham Lewis, the issue is seized by U.S. postal authorities. Ten thousand African Americans march in New York City in an NAACPsponsored silent protest of racial discrimination and violence. Lucy Diggs Slowe wins the women's single title at the first national American Tennis Association championship, be-
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1917
coming the first African American woman athletic champion. Kate Gleason becomes the first white woman to be president of a national bank. Highly paid and wellrespected film director Lois Weber (1882-1939) establishes her own production house, releasing films through Universal Pictures. Over the course of her career, she directs and produces between 200 and 400 films, fewer than 50 of which survive today. Weber's work is so popular in her day that Universal Studios builds her her own studio and eventually pays her $2500 a week. The Bolshevik Revolution occurs in Russia. Thomas Edison, in his essay "The Woman of the Future," predicts that the American woman will be liberated by such new inventions as the washing machine, refrigerator, stove, iron, and carpet sweeper, transforming her from a "domestic laborer" to a "domestic
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engineer" and freeing her energy for "broader, more constructive fields." Mary Lathrop is the first woman member admitted to the American Bar Association. Horace Brisbin Liveright begins his publishing career; among those employed with his firm are Lillian Hellman and Edith W. Stern.
1917-1921
1918
Louise Bryant (18871936), journalist, author, suffragist: Six Red Months in Russia. Willa Gather: My Antonia, a novel. Rose Cohen, Jewish American author: Out of the Shadow. Sarah Lee Brown Fleming (1875-1963), African American novelist and poet: Hope's Highway, a novel. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Edge-water People.
1917-1921
The 4-volume Cambridge History of American Literature is published.
1918
Annette Abbott Adams becomes the first woman district attorney, serving in Northern California; in 1920, she becomes the first woman to be an assistant attorney general in the U.S.; in 1950 she becomes the first woman to sit on the California Supreme Court. Anne Martin of Nevada is the first woman to run for the Senate. World War I ends; the peace treaty is signed in Versailles in 1919.
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Elizabeth I lasanovitz, Jewish American author: One of Them. Florence Marian Howe: Memories Grave and Gray. Georgia Douglas Johnson (1886-1966), African American poet: The Heart of a Woman and Other Poems, first African American female to receive national recognition since Frances E. W. Harper. Lulu Hunt Peters: Diet and Health with a Key to the Calories, which introduces "calorie counting" to numbers of Americans. Lola Ridge (1873-1941), poet, political activist: The Ghetto and Other Poems. Jessie R. Rittenhouse: The Door of Dreams. Emma Speed Sampson (1868-1947): Billy and the Major.
1918
Women in Great Britain over 30 years old as well as householders or wives thereof are enfranchised. Women are also enfranchised in Austria, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Scotland, and Wales. Woman suffrage passes by state referendum in Michigan and South Dakota but is defeated in Louisiana. Despite President Wilson's plea, the Senate fails to provide the necessary two-thirds majority vote to pass the federal woman suffrage amendment. Writer Katherine Anne Porter begins her involvement in Mexican politics. The radical Marxist journal The Liberator begins publication. Gladys Dick founds the Cradle Society in Evanston, Illinois, the first professional adoption organization in the country. Linda A. Eastman becomes the head of the Cleveland public library system, making her the
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first woman head librarian for a major metropolitan area. Canned foods are no longer limited to just peas, corn, and succotash but include numerous ready-made meals, from lobster a la Newburg to Heinz's spaghetti in meat sauce. Margaret B. Owen sets a typewriting speed record in New York City by typing 170 words per minute with no errors. Installment-credit plans are introduced.
1919
Annie Heloise Abel: The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War. ZoeAkins (1886-1958), poet, dramatist, screenwriter: Declasse, a play. Mildred Aldrich (18531928), journalist and author of four firsthand accounts of life in wartime France: When Johnny Comes Marching Home, a novel. Delilah L. Beasley, African American historian: The Negro Trail Blazers of California.
1919
The Eighteenth Amendment (Prohibition) is ratified, largely as the result of women's, and especially female temperance supporters', efforts. Congress passes the Volstead Act, which, among other things, defines intoxicating liquor as any drink with 0.05 percent alcohol content, establishes penalties and injunctions, and allows for search-andseizure. Lady Astor, nee Nancy Witcher Langhorne, takes her oath of membership
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Gertrude Barrows Bennett, under the pen name "Francis Stevens": The Cerberus Heads, a sciencefiction novel. Charlotte Hawkins Brown (1882P-1961), African American fiction writer, educator, and clubwoman: "Mammy ": An Appeal to the Heart of the South, a short story published as a book. Mamie Jordan Carver, African American author: As It Ix; or, The Conditions under Which the Race Problem Challenges the White Man's Solution. Mary Hallock Foote: The Ground-swell. Maggie Shaw Fullilove, African American novelist: Who Was Responsible?. Susan Glaspell: Bernice, a full-length play in which the characters try to understand a woman now dead. Elsie Janis (1889-1956), vaudeville actress, producer, and memoirist: The Big Shoiv: My Six Months with the American Expeditionary Forces.
1919
to the British House of Commons, becoming the first American-born woman to serve as a Member of Parliament. After her husband, Woodrow, suffers a stroke, Edith Boiling Wilson is credited with operating as acting President of the United States. Alice Hamilton, physician, reformer, and a founder of occupational health, becomes Harvard's first woman professor when she is hired to teach in its new industrial hygiene program. The National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, Inc., of the United States of America is established by Lena Madeson Phillips. Fannie (Mooney) Sellins, socialist labor union organizer, is shot and killed during a skirmish with sheriffs of the Allegheny Coal Company over miners' rights. During the first "Red Scare," anarchist author and lecturer Emma Goldman is among those de-
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Mary Johnston: Michael Forth. Amy Lowell (1874-192 5), poet: Pictures of the Floating World, which firmly establishes her reputation as a leading Imagist poet. Alice Rostetter: Widow's Veil, a play. Alice Applegate Sargeant: Following the Flag: Diary of a Soldier's Wife. Laura Eliza Wilkes, African American historian: Missing Pages in American History, Revealing the Services of Negroes in the Early Wars in the United States of America, 1641-1815.
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ported to the Soviet Union. Chicago race riots leave 23 blacks and 15 whites dead and over 1000 homeless; race riots occur in other cities across the country that summer, including Knoxville, Tennessee; Omaha, Nebraska; and Longview, Texas. A white mob in Oklahoma lynches African American Marie Scott after her brother kills the white man who raped her. By this year, 38 presses have been established at the country's universities. Sylvia Beach opens her Paris bookshop, Shakespeare and Company, as a meeting place for expatriate American writers; among those who live in Paris for several months or years after the First World War are Djuna Barnes, Katherine Anne Porter, Gertrude Stein, and Edith Wharton. Harcourt, Brace & Howe publishing company is established after the first two men leave Henry Holt & Co.; Ellen
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Knowles Eayres, Vassar graduate and Harcourt's future wife, is instrumental in helping to get the firm off the ground. The New York Daily News is established, considered the first picturetext tabloid newspaper and a forerunner of Sunday supplement magazines. The first sensational "true story" magazine, aptly named True Story, begins publication. The first celebration of the annual National Children's Book Week is held. Julia Morgan (18721957), architect of over 1000 buildings, is chosen by William Randolph Hearst to be the designer for his huge mansion, San Simeon, in California. Louise Seaman (Bechtel) becomes editor of children's books at Macmillan. Seven million people purchase automobiles. Mary Church Terrell, human rights activist and
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head of many progressive activist organizations, including the Colored Women's League of Washington, D.C., the National Association of Colored Women, and the International Council of Women of the Darker Races, receives international recognition at the International Peace Congress in Zurich. The state legislatures in Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin grant women presidential suffrage. Women in Belgium, British East Africa, Holland, Iceland, Luxembourg, Rhodesia, and Sweden are enfranchised. The federal woman suffrage amendment passes the House, fails initially in the Senate, but passes on the second vote and is sent to the states for ratification.
1919-1920
1920s
African American women's voices play a large part in the burgeoning of creative activ-
1919-1920
Chicago "Black Sox" scandal.
1920s
Georgia O'Keeffe (18871986), one of the most original painters of the 20th century, creates
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ity known as the Harlem Renaissance. Gwendolyn Bennett, Marita Bonner. Anita Scott Coleman, Alice Ruth Moore DunbarNelson, Jessie Redmon Fauset, Angelina Weld Grimke, Zora Neale Hurston, Georgia Douglas Johnson, Nella Larsen, Eloise Bibb Thompson, and Dorothy West, among others, are publishing poetry, short stories, and essays in publications such as Opportunity, The Crisis, the Saturday Evening Quill, and the Messenger.
1920s
bold, semi-abstract, and vibrant paintings that often deal with huge close-up details of flowers and bleached bones, as well as abstract views of clouds, rocks, mountains, and seascapes. Through his caricatures for Vanity Fair magazine, John Held invents the figure of the "flapper" as an icon for the "RoaringTwenties." Nell Brinkley leads women cartoonists of the era with her drawings of flappers. Other important women cartoonists of the 1920s and 1930s include Ethel Hays, Virginia Huget, and Gladys Parker.
Georgia Douglas Johnson, African American playwright and poet in Washington, D.C., presides over the Saturday Nighters' — all of whom are contributors to or associated with the New Negro Renaissance—discussions of art, politics, and their own poetry and fiction.
Lillian Evanti (18901967) becomes the first African American woman to develop a professional career in grand opera.
Anne Spencer (18821975), African American lyric poet, is publishing in the major anthologies of her time.
1920
S. Josephine Baker, medical inspector and pioneer in health education: Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies, Healthy Children.
1920
The Nineteenth Amendment (Woman Suffrage) is ratified. Tennessee is the necessary 36th state to ratify.
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1920
Alice Brown: The Wind Between the Worlds, a novel. Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson: The Dunbar Speaker and Entertainer: Containing the Best Prose and Poetic Selections by and about the Negro. Sarah Lee Brown Fleming: Clouds and Sunshine, poetry. Zona Gale (1874-1938), novelist, short-story writer, dramatist, poet, and pacifist: Miss Lulu Bett, a novel, her dramatization of which wins a Pulitzer Prize in 1921. Marie Ganz, Jewish American author: Rebels into Anarchy—and Out Again.
CONTEXTS 1920
The League of Women Voters is formed to continue the work of the now defunct National American Woman Suffrage Association. Total population numbers 106,461,000; 5,735,811 immigrants have arrived since 1911; black population numbers 10,463,131, the first time it has dipped below 10 percent of the total population. For the first time, more than half of the population live in cities (51.2 percent). Nearly half of all bookkeepers and accountants are women; more than 90 percent of all typists and stenographers are women.
Angelina Weld Grimke (1880-1958), poet, dramatist, and short-story writer: Rachel, first drama to be published by a black woman and to be performed professionally by black actors.
Almost 12 percent of all female workers are professional.
Addie W. Hunton and Kathryn M. Johnson: Two Colored Women with the American Expeditionary Forces.
Some 21.3 percent of all gainfully employed adult females are white.
Of those black women who are not field laborers, 80 percent are maids, washerwomen, and cooks.
More than 47 percent of the total
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1920
Edna St. Vincent Millay: Aria da Capo, an antiwar one-act play first performed in 1919. Lizette Woodworth Reese: Spicewood, a collection of poetry. Sally Nelson Robins, southern novelist and journalist: Romances of Illustrious Virginians. Margaret Sanger: Woman and the New Race, a treatise on the benefits of voluntary motherhood; over 200,000 copies are sold. Evelyn Scott (18931963), novelist, poet, and playwright: Precipitations, poems. Harriet Prescott Spofford: The Elder's People, a collection of stories. Edith Wharton: The Age of Innocence, wins the Pulitzer Prize for novel/ fiction in 1921. Zara Wright, African American novelist: Black and White Tangled Threads and Kenneth. Anzia Yezierska (1882?1970), Polish-born novelist and short-story writer, chronicler of the
1920
college enrollment is female. The U.S. Department of Labor establishes the Woman's Bureau to oversee wage-earning women's rights and interests. Mary Anderson becomes its first director. Black and white women meet in Memphis and form the Women's Committee of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation. Palmer Raids; the "Red Scare" continues. Labor activist Elizabeth Gurley Flynn helps to establish the American Civil Liberties Union. Five thousand radios are in use in American homes. The Sears, Roebuck catalog has 92 illustrated pages of women's clothing, compared with none in 1894. Five percent of the physicians in the U.S. are women. Marie Luhring is elected to the Society of Automotive Engineers, becom-
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1920
experience of Jewish immigrants: Hungry Hearts, a collection of stories.
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CONTEXTS 1920
ing its first woman member. Social worker Edith Abbott helps establish the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago, the first graduate school in social work within a university. Warren G. Harding is elected President; he dies in 1922 and his Vice President, Calvin Coolidge, is sworn in. Ethelda Bleibtrey becomes the first American woman to win a gold medal in the Olympic games. The National Association of Book Publishers is formed. Doubleday is the first publisher to run full-page ads for a single work in the New York Times Book Review. F. Scott Fitzgerald publishes his short story "Bernice Bobs Her Hair," detailing the interest in the fashion of hair bobbing in his day. Bessie Smith (1898?1937), who will come to
274
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1920
1920
be known as the "empress of the blues" for hits such as "St. Louis Blues" and "Nobody's Blues But Mine," begins her recording career. Literary Review, a supplement to the Saturday section of the New York Evening Post, begins publishing. Librarian Sarah Byrd Askew designs the bookmobile, a traveling library for those who lack easy access to books.
1920-1921
Jessie Redmon Fauset (1884P-1961), African American novelist and editor, writes and edits Brownie's Book, a magazine for African American children.
1920-1921
1921
Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkala-Sa): American Indian Stories.
1921
Faith Baldwin (18931978): Mavis of Green Hill, first of many popular romances for women that will sell well over ten million copies. Rachel Crothers: Nice People, a play.
Oklahoma Congresswoman Alice M. Robertson becomes the first woman to preside over the House of Representatives. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are convicted of murder; they are executed in 1927; on the eve of the execution, writers including Edna St. Vincent Millay and Katherine Anne Porter keep vigil.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1921
Carrie Law Morgan Figgs, African American poet and playwright: Nuggets of Gold, poetry. Susan Glaspell: Inheritors, a play. Hazel Hall (1886-1924), poet: Curtains. Elizabeth Ross Haynes, African American author: Unsung Heroes. Edna St. Vincent Millay: Second April, poetry. Marianne Moore (18871972), poet, editor, and critic: Poems. Louise Pound (18721958), teacher, sportswoman, editor, linguist: Poetic Origins and the Ballad. Mary Roberts Rinehart: The Confession, a gothic mystery novel. Jessie B. Rittenhouse: The Lifted Cup. Evelyn Scott: The Narrow House, a novel. Mary Etta Spencer, African American novelist and short-story writer: The Resentment, a novel.
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CONTEXTS 1921
Margaret Anderson, editor of The Little Revieiv, is fined $50 for printing excerpts of James Joyce's Ulysses. European immigration is limited by law to 3 percent of the number of foreign-born of each nationality present in the country at the time of the 1910 census. Margaret Sanger founds the American Birth Control League. Alice Paul, president of the National Women's Party, revokes Mary Talbert's invitation to speak at one of its meetings, claiming that as an NAACP representative, Talbert represents a group that advocates racial equality, not gender equality. The Women's Peace Union is founded, disbanding in 1941. The Association of Collegiate Alumni becomes the American Association of University Women; Ada Comstock becomes its first president, a position she holds until she becomes Radcliffe College's
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1921
Elinor Wylie (18851928), poet and novelist: Nets to Catch the Wind, very successful volume of poetry.
1921
first full-time woman president in 1923. Georgianna R. Simpson at the University of Chicago, Sadie Tanner Mossell at the University of Pennsylvania, and Eva Dykes at Radcliffe College, are the first known black women in the country to earn Ph.D. degrees. Dual pricing of books is inaugurated when the publishers of Gertrude Atherton's new novel, Sistersin-Law, announce that the book will cost $2 in cloth and $1.50 in paper. Little Blue Books are introduced; cheaply produced, cheap in price, they enable vast numbers of readers across the country to order classics in philosophy, literature, psychoanalysis, and socialism through the mail at cutrate prices. The Publishers AdClub is formed; through it, publishers purchase cooperative display advertising in newspapers across the country. Bessie Coleman becomes the first licensed black pi-
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CONTEXTS 1921
1921
lot in the world. She is featured on a 1995 postage stamp. The first Miss America Pageant is held in Atlantic City; Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., wins. Kotex "sanitary napkins" are first marketed. Knee-length skirts for women become the standard fashion. Former President Grover Cleveland's bahy daughter, Rvith, gets a candy bar named after her.
1921-1938
1922
Jane Addams: Peace and Bread in Time of War. Willa Gather: One of Ours, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for novel/fiction. Carrie Williams Clifford: The Widening Light, poetry. Janet Ayer Fairbank (1878-1951), novelist: The Cortlandts of Washington Square, first in a series
1921-1938
Summer sessions are held at Bryn Mawr College to educate working women.
1922
The USSR is formed. Mussolini becomes dictator in Italy. The Cable Act insures women will no longer be deprived of citizenship upon marriage to an alien. Rebecca Larimer Felton, 88, becomes the first woman appointed to the United States Senate; she serves one day then
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1922
focusing on the life of a woman. Helen R. Hull (18881971), lesbian novelist, short-story writer, and, in her youth, political activist: Quest. She produces 17 novels and at least 65 short stories. Georgia Douglas Johnson: Bronze: A Book of Verse. Jeanette Lee: The Mysterious Office, a mystery. Kathleen Norris (18801966), prolific novelist, short-story writer, memoirist: Certain People of Importance. Emily Post (1872-1960): Etiquette in Society, in Business, in Politics, and at Home. Olive Higgins Prouty (1882-1974), novelist: Stella Dallas, later made into a well-known film starring Barbara Stanwyck. J. Pauline Smith, African American poet: "Exceeding Riches" and Other Verse. Gertrude Stein: Geography and Plays.
1922
resigns so that the newly elected senator can take her place. The Permanent Committee for the Abolition of Child Labor is formed. Claude McKay publishes his Harlem Shadows, which is credited with launching the decade of black creative talent referred to as the "Harlem Renaissance." For the first time, the Spingarn Medal award, established by the NAACP in 1911, is given to a woman, Mary B. Talbert. Meta Warrick Fuller (1877-1968), African American sculptor, exhibits a life-size sculpture, Awakening Ethopia. She becomes known for using African Americans as models for her sculptures. The trend toward producing "blurbs" on book jackets (and of critics responding to blurbs more than to the book itself) has grown so pervasive that when publisher George Duran attempts to bring out its January 1923 books in plain manila wrapping paper, sales
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1922
Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): Sunny-san, a novel. Lillian E. Wood, African American novelist: "Let My People Go."
CONTEXTS 1922
drop and the firm soon returns to "blurbed" jackets. May Massee becomes editor of children's books at Doubleday, Doran. The word "obey" is deleted from marriage vows in the Protestant Episcopal service. More than 40 million Americans buy movie tickets. Women's razors and depilatories are first advertised in Sears, Roebuck catalogs. The "flapper" costume —a chemise with dropped waist and raised hem — comes into style. The American Social Hygiene Association begins a sex education campaign to prevent the spread of venereal diseases. Better Homes and Gardens magazine begins publication. Reader's Digest is first published. By this date, over 100 novels have been made into movies.
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1922
1922
Blanche Yurka(18871974), stage and screen actress best known for classical drama and for roles as strong-willed women, plays Gertrude to John Barrymore's Hamlet for 125 performances. By this date there are 30 radio broadcasting stations nationwide; a year later there are 556.
1923
S. Josephine Baker: The Growing Child. Louise Bogan (18971970), poet and longtime poetry critic for The New Yorker: Body of This Death, first book of poetry. Willa Gather: A Lost Lady, a novel. Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-1947): Woman Suffrage and Politics. Thelma Duncan (19021988?), African American playwright: The Death Dance. Hazel Hall: Walkers, a collection of poetry. Mary Johnston: The Slave Ship, a novel promoting racial justice.
1923
An Equal Rights Amendment is presented to Congress by Alice Paul of the National Woman's Party. Adkins v. Children's Hospital makes a minimum wage law for women unconstitutional, thus basically, as labor reformer Florence Kelly noted, insuring "the inalienable right of women to starve." Margaret Sanger establishes the Clinical Research Bureau to investigate establishing clinical services for women seeking birth control information. Microbiologist and physician Gladys Henry Dick and her husband isolate the bacterial cause of scarlet fever.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1923
Edith Summers Kelley (1884-1956), Canadianborn novelist who lived most of her life in the U.S.: Weeds. Flora Klickman: The Popular Knitting Book. MinaLoy (1882-1986), Modernist poet, playwright, and painter: Lunar Baedecker, collection of poems. Edna St. Vincent Millay wins a Pulitzer Prize for The Ballad of the HarpWeaver, A Few Figs from Thistles, and 8 sonnets in American Poetry, 1922, a Miscellany.
Jessica Nelson North (m^-?): A Prayer Rug, poetry. Sally Nelson Robins: Love Stories of Illustrious Virginians. Lucy Maynard Salmon, historian: The Newspaper and the Historian and The Newspaper and Authority.
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CONTEXTS
1923
"Yes, We Have No Bananas" is a popular song. Josephine Baker (19061975), African American entertainer known for her dance techniques and daring costumes and, later, as one of France's most beloved performers, starts her illustrious career in the chorus of the Broadway show Shuffle Along. Alma Cummings becomes the first person to win the first dance marathon held in the United States, setting a world record by dancing for 27 hours. Maidenform, Inc., founded by Ida Rosenthal, manufactures its first bra. Time magazine begins publication. An attempt by a New York Supreme Court Justice to impose a "Clean Books" bill —which would censor publishers —is defeated.
Genevieve Taggard (1894-1948): Hawaiian Hilltop, poems.
By this date, some 500 communities produce competing daily newspapers.
Mary Evaline Wolff, (1877-1964), also known
W. W. Norton founds his own publishing firm.
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1923
as Sister Mary Madeleva, scholar and first of the modern nun-poets: Knights Errant, and Other Poems.
1923
Elinor Wylie: Black Armour, poetry.
Bessie Smith's "Downhearted Blues/Gulf Coast Blues" becomes the first record by an African American to sell over a million copies.
Anzia Yezierska: Children of Loneliness.
1924
Dorothy Day (18971980), journalist, activist, co-founder of many missions and of The Catholic Worker, novelist, and autobiographer: The Eleventh Virgin, a novel. Jessie Redmon Fauset: There Is Confusion, a novel. Edna Ferber: So Big, winner in 1925 of the Pulitzer Prize for novel/ fiction. Emma Goldman: My Disillusionment with Russia. Dorothy Guinn, African American playwright: Out of the Dark. Marianne Moore: Observations, a book of poetry which receives The Dial magazine award in 1925.
D. H. Lawrence publishes his Studies in Classic American Literature, which focuses on maleauthored classics exclusively.
1924
An act of Congress grants Native Americans citizenship. "Ma" Miriam Amanda Ferguson of Texas, an active suffragist and prohibitionist, succeeds her husband and becomes the nation's first woman governor. Calvin Coolidge is elected to his first full term as President. Sociologists Robert and Helen Lynd embark on their study of life in a small American city that results in the publication of Middletown, which documents the new autonomy, mobility, and sexuality of Muncie, Indiana's, youth.
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1924
Frances Newman (18831928), Atlanta novelist, short-story writer, critic, and librarian: The Short Story's Mutations: From Petronius to Paul Morand and "Rachel and Her Children," winner of an O. Henry Memorial Award. Julia Peterkin (18801961), novelist and specialist in the life and language of the Gullahs of South Carolina: Green Thursday. Dorothy Scarborough (1878-1935), Texas novelist and scholar: In the Land of Cotton. Margaret Wilson: The Able McLaughlins, Pulitzer Prize for novel/fiction.
CONTEXTS
1924
Bertha Mahoney and Elinor Whitney begin publishing the Horn Book Magazine, the first magazine devoted to reviewing children's literature. The average cost of hardcover nonfiction books ranges from $5 to $10. The Saturday Review of Literature is founded. Florence Rood becomes the first woman president of the American Federation of Teachers. Maiy McLeod Bethune becomes president of the National Association of Colored Women. There are 2,500,000 radios in American homes. J. Edgar Hoover is appointed head of the Bureau of Investigations (later the FBI). Polly Adler, a discouraged businesswoman, sets out to become "the best goddamn madam in America." Her clients include wits of the Algonquin Round Table, motion-picture stars, Mafia figures, and business tycoons.
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CONTEXTS 1924
U.S. citizens consume 245 million ice cream cones annually. H. L. Mencken and George Jean Nathan begin publishing The American Mercury. Simon & Schuster is established; its first book is the first Cross Word Puzzk Book. When Putnam publishers runs a crossword puzzle contest in the New York World, promising prizes to the first three contestants to deliver correct solutions to the Putnam office, crowds of possible winners begin to gather after midnight of the day the puzzle is issued. By the time the office opens the following day, police have to be called in to restore order. From 1924 to 1930, no Chinese women are allowed into the U.S. The Vassar Board of Trustees creates an Interdisciplinary School of Euthenics to teach development and care of the family, offering courses such as "Husband and Wife" and "Motherhood."
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1925
Annie Heloise Abel: The American Indian under Reconstruction. S. Josephine Baker: Child Hygiene. Hallie Quinn Brown (1845-1949), African American author and biographer: Our Women: Past, Present, and Future and Tales My Father Taught Me. Sue M. Wilson Brown: The History of the Order of the Eastern Star among Colored People. Willa Gather: The Professor's House, a novel. Babette Deutsch (18951982), poet and critic: Honey Out of the Rock. Ellen Glasgow: Barren Ground, a novel. Georgia Douglas Johnson: A Sunday Morning in the South, a drama protesting lynching. Aline Kilmer (18881941), poet, essayist, author of children's books: The Poor King's Daughter, and Other Poems.
CONTEXTS
1925
Nellie Taylor Ross of Wyoming becomes the second American woman to succeed her husband as governor of a state. Anatomist Florence Sabin becomes the first female member of the National Academy of Sciences. Margaret Washburn is the second (1931). A young Zora Neale Hurston wins a scholarship to Barnard College, where she is the only black student and where she studies with anthropologist Franz Boas. Marian Anderson (19021993), African American woman known as one of the world's greatest contraltos, first gains public renown in an appearance as soloist at the New York Philharmonic. Schoolteacher John Scopes is tried in Tennessee for teaching evolution in violation of both a state law making such teachings illegal and fundamental religious values. President Calvin Coolidge proclaims that the "business of America is business."
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1925
Amy Lowell: What's O'Clock, wins Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1926. Anita Loos (1893-1981), novelist, script writer: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.
1925
American medical schools institutionalize a 5 percent quota on female applicants. Cosmetic industry sales total $141 million, up $124 million from 1914.
Poet Marianne Moore becomes editor of the revamped former transcendentalist journal The Dial and serves as its editor until it folds in 1929.
The Women's World Fair, the first fair ever devoted exclusively to women's accomplishments, is held in Chicago.
Beatrice Witte Ravenel (1870-1956), South Carolina poet: Arrow of Lightening.
Modern Library, Inc., is founded; it is expanded and renamed Random House two years later.
Mary Roberts Rinehart: The Red Lamp, a gothic mystery.
Viking Press is formed.
Cornelia Otis Skinner (1901-1979), playwright, humorist, actress, biographer: Captain Fury, a play. Gertrude Stein: The Making of Americans; the work had been finished in 1919. Etsu Inagaki Sugimoto, Japanese American novelist: A Daughter of the Samurai, followed by A Daughter of the Narikin (1932), and A Daughter of the Nohfu (1935).
The New Yorker magazine begins publication. Crossword puzzles are the latest rage. The "Charleston" becomes a popular dance step. Ku Klux Klan membership is 3 million. Artist Marguerite Thompson Zorach (1887-1968) founds the New York Society of Women Artists and becomes its first president.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1925
Onoto Watanna (Winnifred Eaton): His Royal Nibs.
CONTEXTS
1925
The strip-tease is accidentally invented at New York's Minsky's Burlesque House due to the audience's enthusiastic response when a dancer's shoulder strap breaks during a police raid.
1926
Georgia O'Keeffe paints Black Iris.
Edith Wharton: The Writing of Fiction. Anzia Yezierska: Bread Givers: A Struggle between a Father of the Old World and a Daughter of the New.
1926
Ellen Glasgow: The Romantic Comedians, a novel. Frances Newman: The Hard-Boiled Virgin, a novel banned in Boston for its mention of menstruation, venereal disease, and female sexuality. Dorothy Parker (18931967), leader of the Algonquin Round Table wits: Enough Rope, her first volume of poetry, which becomes a bestseller. Elizabeth Madox Roberts (1881-1941), novelist, poet: The Time of Man. Margaret Sanger: Happiness in Marriage. Elsie Singmaster: Keller's Anna Ruth, a novel. Leonora Speyer: Fiddler's Farewell, which wins the
227
Martha Graham, (18941991), influential dancer and choreographer, forms her first independent dance company. Gertrude Bonnin (ZitkalaSa), the author of autobiographical accounts of her Sioux childhood published in The Atlantic Monthly, founds and becomes the first president of the National Council of American Indians. Violette N. Anderson argues a case before the U.S. Supreme Court, the first black woman to do so. Gertrude Ederle of New York becomes the first woman to swim the English Channel.
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1927 Pulitzer Prize for poetiy.
CONTEXTS 1926
Elizabeth C. Stern: 1 Am a Woman—and a Jew.
Evangelist Aimee Sample McPherson's questionable tales of torture at the hands of kidnappers fill the tabloid papers,
Edith Wharton: Here and Beyond, short stories.
The Book-of-the-Month Club is established. New Masses magazine begins publication; it folds in 1948. Irita Bradford Van Doren, former literary editor of the Nation, begins her long and distinguished career as director/editor of the New York Herald Tribune's Book Review. William Morrow starts his publishing company. Don Juan is the first talking movie. The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is founded. Mae West (1892-1980), who had been appearing in Broadway shows since 1911, has her first big success when she writes, produces, and stars in the play Sex, which runs for almost a year before being closed down by the local vice squad.
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CONTEXTS
1926-1965
Louella Parsons, influential Hollywood gossip columnist, begins appearing in the Los Angeles Examiner.
1926-1965
1927
Willa Gather: Death Comes for the Archbishop, a novel.
1927
Claire Winger Harris becomes the first woman writer to appear in the science fiction pulps, winning a prize for "Fate of the Poseidonia" in Amazing Stories. Mourning Dove, also known as Hum-Ishu-Ma (1888-1936), member of Okanogan tribe, one of the first Native American women to publish a novel: Cogewea the Half-Blood: A Depiction of the Great Montana Cattle Range. Dorothy Parker begins writing stories and a book-review column signed "Constant Reader" for The New Yorker. Julia Peterkin: Black April, a novel set in South Carolina. Nettie Arnold Plummer, African American author: Out of the Depths; or, The Triumph of the Cross.
Charles Lindbergh flies from New York to Paris, the first solo transatlantic flight. Minnie BuckinghamHarper becomes the first African American woman to serve in the U.S. legislature when she is appointed to fill her husband's West Virginia congressional seat. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) is founded. Isadora Duncan (18781927), a founder of modern dance, is killed in a tragic car accident. The movie It gives its star Clara Bow (1905-1965) her nickname "the It girl." The country music industry is born when the Carter Family, led by "Mother Maybelle" Carter, records the first nationally popular records about rural life.
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1927
Elizabeth Madox Roberts: My Heart and My Flesh, a novel.
1927
Lilian Westcott Hale (1881-1963), an important American Impressionist, is elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design; she is promoted to full membership four years later. Garnering many awards, she is known both for her portraits and for her many pictures of woods and gardens.
1927-1928
Janet Gaynor (19061984) wins the first Best Actress Oscar for Seventh Heaven, Sunrise, and Street Angel. Gaynor is thus the only actress to win for silent film roles.
1928
Trotsky is exiled; Stalin rises to power in the USSR.
Dorothy Scarborough: Impatient Griselda, a novel. Evelyn Scott: Migrations, a novel. Eulalie Spence (18941981), African American dramatist: Fool's Errand: A Play in One Act and Foreign Mail. Marjorie Wilson, African American author: Vagrant Love. Mary Alice Wyman, biographer: Two American Pioneers, Scba Smith and Elizabeth Oakes Smith. 1927-1928
1928
Bess Streeter Aldrich (1881-1954), author of several novels about life in the Plains states: A Lantern in Her Hand. Djuna Barnes (18921982), experimentalist au-
African American inventor Marjorie Joyner patents a permanent waving machine.
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1928
thor of journalism, plays, and stories, as well as two novels: Ryder, described by its author as "a female Tom Jones." Vina Delmar, novelist, playwright, short-story writer: Bad Girl, a bestselling novel. Isa Glenn, southern novelist: Southern Charm. Hazel Hall: Cry of Time, posthumously published volume of poetry, Josephine Herbst (18971969), proletarian novelist: Nothing Is Sacred. Eleanor Johnson, working with American Education Publications, begins publishing Weekly Reader, a newspaper for school children. Its circulation in the first year reaches 100,000; in the 1990s it has more than 9 million subscribers. Georgia Douglas Johnson: An Autumn Love Cycle, poetry. Nella Larsen (18911963), novelist and first African American author to receive a Guggenheim fellowship for creative writing: Quicksand.
CONTEXTS
1928
Graciela Olivarez, the first woman to chair the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund, is born in New York City. Ethel Barrymore (18791959) is the first living actress to have a theater named after her (New York City). Fanny Brice makes her film debut in My Man. Mae West appears in Diamond Lil. This year marks the peak of community newspapers, which number 14,000. The average hardcover novel increases in price to $3. Skywriting is used for the first time to promote a book: Evelyn Johnson and Gretta Palmer's Murder. Carole Lombard (born Jane Alice Peters, 19081942) begins one of the most successful careers as a female comic in the history of films. She will make 42 talking pictures, specializing in screwball
252 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1928
Gladys Li, Asian American playwright: The Submission of Rose Moy. Anne O'Hare McCormick (1880-1954), journalist: The Hammer and the Scythe: Communist Russia Enters the Second Decade. Margaret Mead (19011978), anthropologist: Coming of Age in Samoa. Frances Newman: Dead Lovers Are Faithful Lovers, a novel. Carol Norton: Bobs, a Girl Detective. Julie Peterkin: Scarlet Sisfer Mary, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel. Edith Everett Taylor Pope, southern novelist: Not Magnolia. The first selection of Doubleday's Crime Club is Kay Cleaver Strahan's The Double Moon Mystery. Sophie Treadwell, playwright: Machinal. Edith Wharton: The Children, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1928
comedies, between 1928 and her death in 1942 on a war bond tour. Known as a consummate professional, one of the highest paid performers of her day, and a voracious reader, she stars in two filmsconsidered among the best comedies ever produced, My Man Got/frey and Nothing Sacred. Socialite Mrs. Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte is the firstperson depicted in a testimonial ad for a book; she is shown holding a Borzoi Book and is described as an ardent admirer in an ad that runs in The New Yorker, the New York Times Book Review, and Publishers' Weekly. The teletypesetter is first demonstrated. Unlike the telegraph, it sends along with news stories impulses that deliver encoded instructions to linotype machines so that they automatically prepare pages for print. Greek-American physician George Nicholas Papanicolau develops the "Pap" or vaginal smear test at Cornell University; in
Women Writers in the United States * 233 TEXTS
1928
Elinor Wylie: Trivial Breath, poetry.
CONTEXTS
1928
1943 the medical establishment recognizes the "Pap" smear as a method of detecting cervical cancer. Herbert Hoover is elected President.
1929
Leonie Adams (18991988), poet: High Falcon and Other Poems. Gertrude Berg, who performs as Molly Goldberg, writes all of the 4500 scripts for the 20-year run of The Rise of the Goldbergs, a popular radio program that begins this year. Louise Bogan: Dark Summer, poetry. Anna Hempstead Branch (1875-1937), poet with an interest in mysticism and social service: Sonnets from a Lock Box. Viola Irene Cooper: Windjamming to Fiji, a memoir. Rachel Crothers: Let Us Be Gay, a play about divorce. Maud Cuney Hare: Antar ofAraby.
1929
By this date, 80 percent of families' needs are purchased by women. By this date, nearly seven in ten homes have electricity. The Women's Air Derby, the first transcontinental race for women pilots, is held July 29 with participants flying from Santa Monica, California, to Cleveland, Ohio. Shortly thereafter, 99 of the 126 licensed women pilots in the U.S. form the "Ninety-Nines," "dedicated to assist women in aeronautical research, air racing events, the acquisition of aerial experience, and the administration of aid through aerial means in times of emergency." Some 27 million people purchase automobiles. More than 100 million people buy movie tickets.
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1929
Kathcrine Bement Davis: Factors in the Sex Lives of Twenty-two Hundred Women. Mignon Eberhart: The Patient in Room 18, her first of approximately 70 detective novels. Anne Ellis (1875-1938): The Life of an Ordinary Woman, her first of three autobiographical works set in the mining areas of the West. Pearl Ellis publishes Americanization through Homemaking, a handbook emphasizing health, hygiene, and education written expressly, Ellis suggests, for assimilating Mexican American girls and other immigrants into white culture and customs. Jessie Redmon Fauset: Plum Bun: A Novel -without a Moral. Josephine Herbst: Money for Love, a novel. Helen Keller: Midstream: My Later Life. Nella Larsen: Passing, a novel.
1929
Since 1920, there has been a 60 percent increase in book production, attributed to a growth in public interest and in the number oi bestsellers. The American publishers of Radclyffe Hall's lesbian novel, The Well of Loneliness, are tried and convicted of obscenity, although an appeals court overturns the verdict later in the year. British feminist and author Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) publishes her highly influential A Room of One's Own. The publishing firm of Earrar & Rinehart is established; Margaret Sanger will be among its authors. Nina Mae McKinney (1913-1967) becomes the first black female motionpicture star when she appears in King Vidor's Hallelujah. She receives rave reviews and an unprecedented five-year contract from MGM, but her success is short-lived as there are almost no roles available for black actresses.
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1929
Helen Merrell Lynd (1896-1982), sociologist: Middletown: A Study in Contemporary Culture, with her husband, Robert S. Lynd; followed by Middletown in Transition: A Study in Cultural Conflicts (1935) and Update: Middletown Families: Fifty Years of Change and Continuity (1982). Dorothy Reed Mendenhall, researcher in child and maternal health: Midwifery in Denmark, based on her study of childbirth in Denmark, argues that the American tendency toward intervention in the birth process is damaging and advocates midwifery and reliance on natural processes. May Miller, African American playwright and poet: Graven Images and Riding the Goat. She is considered by some one of the parents of black drama; her first play was published when she was 15. Many of her works are in a folk idiom and focus on figures from the Bible or from black history. Lola Ridge: Firehead, a sonnet sequence responding to the execu-
CONTEXTS
1929
Dorothy Arzner (19001979) directs The Wild Party. From the late 1920s through the 1940s she will be the most prominent woman director and producer in Hollywood. She is openly lesbian and other directors claim she is accepted because her lesbianism "made her one of the boys." The first national study of sexual attitudes and experiences is conducted by Katherine Bement Davis. She finds that, among women "assumed to be normal" before interviewed, "50.4% of them had experienced intense emotional relations with other women." About half of these relations were accompanied by sex or "were recognized as sexual in character." Margaret S anger forms the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control. Her New York birth control clinic is raided and three nurses and two doctors are arrested; the case against them is later dismissed. Dorothy Eustis becomes president of the Seeing Eye organization, which
236
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tions of Sacco and Vanzetti.
1929
Mary Roberts Rinehart: This Strange Adventure, novel.
she had founded when she came up with the idea of training dogs to lead the blind. The U.S. stock market crashes, launching the Great Depression.
Dorothy Scarborough: Can't Get a Redbird, a novel. Evelyn Scott: The Wave, an experimental novel. Agnes Smedley (18921950), Daughter of Earth, an autobiographical novel. Leane Zugsmith (19031969), Jewish: proletarian novelist and feminist: All Victories Are Alike. late 1920s
1930s
Women writers such as Sophie Wenzel Ellis, L. Taylor Hansen, Lilith Lorraine, and Leslie F. Stone are publishing science-fiction stories in the popular science-fiction pulps of the day, such as Amazing Stories. For the next few decades, many women who publish in the science-fiction pulps will do so under male pseudonyms.
late 1920s
Margaret Sanger's birth control clinic conducts a study of 10,000 mostly working-class clients and finds that one out of five pregnancies have been intentionally terminated.
1930s
Ma Barker and her sons gain notoriety for their criminal activities.
Women Writers in the United States * 257 TEXTS 1930s
CONTEXTS 1930s
Amphetamine "diet pills" are first introduced for clinical treatment of obesity. Comic books begin to become popular; at their height in the 1950s, some 35 million copies are sold each month. As sound pictures become the norm and large studios come to the fore, Hollywood enters its Golden Age. Among the actresses who will achieve stardom during this decade are Claudette Colbert, Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Irene Dunne, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Carole Lombard, and Myrna Loy. Katherine Dunham, African American dancer, choreographer, anthropologist, teacher, and initiate of Haitian voodun, is the first to bring African and Caribbean dance styles to Broadway and Hollywood. Ethel Waters (19001977), African American singer, comedienne, and actress, becomes the first widely acknowledged female jazz singer; among her best known songs are "Dinah," "Heat Wave," and "His Eye Is on the
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1930
Jane Addams: The Second Twenty Years at Hull Howe. Thehna Duncan: Sacrifice. Susan Glaspell: Alison's House, a play based on the life of Emily Dickinson, wins Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1931. Edith Hamilton: The Greek Way, a scholarly study. Dorothy Parker: Laments for the Living, stories. Julia Pctcrkin's Scarlet Sister Mary is dramatized by Daniel Reed, with a white cast, headed by Ethel Barrymore, in blackface. Katharine Anne Porter (1890-1980), Texas author of 27 works of short fiction and one novel: Flowering Judas, and Other Stories. Lizette Woodworth Reese: White April and Other Poems.
1930s
Sparrow." Her 1939 Broadway performance in the drama Mamba 's Daughter marks the first time a black woman appears in a Broadway drama.
1930
Four million Americans are unemployed. From 34 to 44 percent of black households in the largest northern cities have at least two employed workers in them. Some 27.1 percent of foreign-born, 19 percent of native-born white, and 5.5 percent of black working women are employed in manufacturing. More than 14 percent of all female workers are in professional occupations. U.S. census records 1,998,000 servants. Black women represent approximately 2 5 percent of all women employed in steam laundries. Twenty-nine percent of black households are headed by a woman. Of the 45,200 Filipinos in America, 2500 are women.
Women Writers in the United States * 239 TEXTS
1930
Jessie B. Rittenhouse: The Secret Bird. Elizabeth Madox Roberts: The Great Meadow, a historical novel set in Kentucky. Bernadotte E. Schmitt: The Coming of War: 1914, winner of Pulitzer Prize for history in 1931. Edith Wharton: Certain People, a collection of stories. Mildred Wirt Benson begins ghostwriting the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories for the Stratemeyer syndicate. Under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene, she authors most of the first 25 volumes in the series, which begins with The Secret of the Old Clock. By the mid-1990s, the Nancy Drew series has sold over 80 million copies and has been translated into at least 17 foreign languages. Later revisions of the series have taken away much of the girl detective's independence and cleverness. Wirt Benson also ghostwrote volumes in several other Stratemeyer series, including the Ruth Field-
CONTEXTS
1930
There are 55 birth control clinics in 23 cities in 15 states. There are roughly 30 million households and 26 million registered automobiles in the
U.S. Four-fifths of all households have electricity. Largely as a result of the Depression, publishing houses including Simon & Schuster and Farrar & Rinehart release their new lists, originally scheduled as hardbacks for $2 to $3 apiece, in paper for a dollar. Factory-made breads are commonplace. "Mother" Jones (Mary Harris), renowned labor organizer and agitator who helped found both the Social Democratic Party and the Industrial Workers of the World, turns 100; her birthday and her accomplishments are celebrated throughout the land . Annie Jump Cannon, known as the "Census Taker of the Heavens," completes a project she be-
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1930
ing, Kay Tracey, and Dana Girls series; for many years she received a flat rate of $125 per book.
1930
gan in 1897: cataloging and classifying approximately 400,000 astronomical objects. Ellen Church becomes the first airline stewardess, an idea she herself suggested to a manager at Boeing Air Transport. Norma Shearer (19001983) receives the Academy Award for Best Actress for her starring role in The Divorcee. Jessie Daniel Ames founds the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching and serves as its director until 1942. Elsie Janis, at one time a popular comedienne, becomes the first woman to produce a Hollywood talking picture, Paramount on Parade. Author Sinclair Lewis becomes the first American author to win the Nobel Prize for literature. Fortune magazine is first published.
1930-1978
Harriet Stratemeyer Adarns (1892-1982), working under a variety of pen
1930-1978
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CONTEXTS
1930-1978
names, takes over from her father the Stratemeyer Syndicate and pens or supervises the production of hundreds of novels in these series: the Nancy Drew Mysteries, the Hardy Boys Mysteries, the Tom Swift Series, the Bobbsey Twins Series, the Honey Bunch Series, the Dana Girls Series, the Barton Books for Girls Series, and the Linda Craig Series.
1930-1978
1931
Readings from Negro Authors, for Schools and Colleges, with a Bibliography of Negro Literature, the first known anthology to be edited by black women — Otelia Cromwell, Lorenzo Dow Turner, and Eva B. Dykes.
1931
Margaret Ayer Barnes (1886-1967), novelist and dramatist: Years of Grace, Pulitzer Prize for novel/ fiction. Mary Ritter Beard (1876-1958), historian, writer, and activist: On Understanding Women. Kay Boyle (1902-1992), novelist, short-story writer, poet, memoirist, and political activist:
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, promoter, patron, and sculptor, opens the Whitney Museum of American Art, devoted to America's avant-garde. Jane Addams becomes the first woman awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Eight African American "Scottsboro boys" are convicted for the rape of two white women in Alabama; their death sentences are later overturned by the Supreme Court. Story magazine, the only "little magazine" exclusively devoted to the short story, begins publication.
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Plagued by the Nightingale, a novel. Pearl S. Buck (18921973): The Good Earth, winner of the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for novel/fiction. Willa Gather makes an exception in her opposition to book clubs and allows the Book-of-the- Month Club to offer Shadows on the Rock to its members after Dorothy Canfield, one of the club's judges, writes Gather; it sells more than 65,000 copies through the club. Chona(1841?-1935): At 90 years of age, Chona relates her autobiography to Ruth M. Underhill, an anthropologist; it is published as The Autobiography of Chona, a Papago Woman. Emily Clark, longtime columnist of "Browsings in an Old Book Shop": Innocence Abroad, a history of the Reviewer. Sadie Tola Daniel, African American author: Women Builders. Jessie Redmon Fauset: The Chinaberty Tree: A Novel of American Life.
CONTEXTS 1931
Women Writers m the United States * 243 TEXTS 1931
Hallie Flanagan and Margaret Ellen Clifford: Can You Hear Their Voices?, an agitprop drama about the plight of farmers. Fannie Hurst (18891968), Jewish American novelist: Back Street. Emma Goldman: Living My Life, her autobiography. Caroline Gordon (18951981), southern fiction writer and critic, associated with the Fugitives: Penhally. Elizabeth Miele, Jewish American playwright: Did I Say No?. Dorothy Parker: Death and Taxes, verse. Mary Roberts Rinehart: My Story, autobiography. Constance Rourke (18851941), biographer, historian, and critic: American Humor: A Study of the National Character. Evelyn Scott: A Calendar of Sin, a novel. Vida Dutton Scudder, literary scholar and social ac-
CONTEXTS 1931
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1931
tivist: Franciscan Adventure.
1931
Phoebe Atwood Taylor (1909-1976), prolific mystery novelist: The Cape Cod Mystery.
1932
Me y Austin: Earth Horizon, autobiography. Kay Boyle: Year Before Last, an experimental, lyrical novel. Fielding Burke (Olive Tilford Dargan, 1869-1968): Call Home the than, a proletarian novel.
1932
Although Louise Stokes and Tydie Pickett are the first African American women ever selected to compete in the Olympics, they are replaced by two white athletes in the actual competition; Stokes is allowed to compete in the 1936 Olympics.
Elaine Sterne Carrington (1892-1958), playwright and short-story writer, begins writing radio serials with the Red Adams series. A primary shaper of the soap-opera genre, she fought to provide positive self-images for women.
Mildred Ella "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias wins two Olympic gold medals in the eight-meter hurdles and javelin and ties for first place in the high jump; "Babe" will break records in track, tennis, basketball, baseball, bowling, diving, and golf.
Mazie Earhart Clark, African American poet: Garden of Memories.
The Lindbergh baby kidnapping case captures the attention of millions.
Rachel Crothers: When Ladies Meet, a play.
Fifty-two writers sign an open letter backing the Communist party ticket for President.
Ella Cara Deloria (18891971), Dakota/Sioux author and scholar: Dakota Texts.
Frances Steloff, owner of New York's famous Gotham Book Mart, is ar-
Women Writers m the United States * 245 TEXTS
1932
Zelda Fitzgerald (18991948): Save Me the Last Waltz, a novel. Ellen Glasgow: The Sheltered Life, a novel. Jovita Gonzalez, Chicana short-story writer: "Among My People," in J. Frank Dobie, ed., Tone the Bell Easy. Helen R. Hull: Heat Lightning, a bestselling novel. Grace Elizabeth King: Memories of a Southern Woman of Letters, an autobiography published a few months after the New Orleans local colorist's death. Janet Lewis, novelist, poet, librettist, and shortstory writer: The Invasion: A Narrative of Events Concerning the Johnston Family of St. Mary's, a novel. Grace Lumpkin, novelist of the southern poor: To Make My Bread. Dorothy Myra Page: Gathering Storm, fictional dramatization of significant events in American labor history.
CONTEXTS
1932
rested for selling "pernicious" literature; the grand jury fails to indict her although 40 books are seized from her store during the arrest and never returned. Painter Isabel Bishop (1902-1988) opens a onewoman show at the Midtown Galleries in New York City. Among her subjects are young working women seen on the streets of the city. Grade Allen (1905-1964) and George Burns begin their 19-year radio show with Burns playing straight man to Allen's comedy. In addition to her career as a comedienne, Allen paints surrealistic works with titles such as Man Builds Better Mousetrap and Buys Mohair Toupe and writes a widely syndicated newspaper column. Florence Beatrice Smith Price (1888-1933), the first successful black woman composer, wins first place in the Wanamaker Music Contest for her Symphony in E Minor. Franklin Delano Roosevelt is elected President.
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1932
Julia Peterkin: Bright Skin, a novel. Elizabeth Madox Roberts: The Haunted Mirror, a collection of short stories. Sarah Royce: A Frontier Lady: Recollections of the Gold Rush and Early California, a posthumously published journal, begun in 1849, chronicling her experiences in the California gold rush. Gertrude Stein: The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas; serialized in Atlantic Monthly and a Book-ofthe-Month Club selection, it is the first work to earn Stein money and popular recognition. Margaret Sutton publishes the first of the Judy Bolton series, chronicling the adventures of a girl detective from age 15 to age 22. Over the course of the 38 books in the series, Judy Bolton grows up and marries an FBI agent, but continues solving mysteries. The series ends in 1967, when it is canceled by Grosset & Dunlap. Kathleen Eldridge Tamagawa, Japanese American
1932
Hattie O. W. Caraway becomes the first woman elected to a full term in the United States Senate. Family Circle magazine begins publication.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1932
autobiographer: Holy Prayers in a Horse V Ear.
247
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1932
Dorothy Thompson (1894-1961), journalist: / Saw Hitler; this work, along with her widely syndicated column "On the Record," helps to alert the English-speaking world to the menace of the Hitler regime. Mae West (1893-1980), playwright, actress, humorist: Diamond Lil, also titled She Done Him Wrong. Edith Wharton: The Gods Arrive, a novel. Laura Ingalls Wilder (1867-1957): Little House in the Big Woods, first in a series of seven semiautobiographical Little House books about growing up on the frontier. Elinor Wylie: Collected Poems, published posthumously. 1932-1934
1933
Sophonisba Preston Breckinridge (18661948): Women in the Twentieth Century: A Study of
1932-1934
Drought makes the Great Plains a "dust bowl."
1933
Katharine Hepburn receives for Morning Glory her first of four Best Actress Oscars.
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1933
Their Political, Social and Economic Activities. Elizabeth Lindsay Davis, African American author: Lifting as They Climb. Jessie Redmon Fauset: Comedy, American Style, a novel. Josephine Herbst: Pity Is Not Enough, first in her Depression-era trilogy. Fannie Hurst: Imitation of Life, later filmed in two popular versions. Claire Kummer, playwright: Her Master's Voice. Cornelia Meigs (18841973), writer of biographies arid novels targeted at young women: Invincible Louisa: The Story of the Author of "Little Women". Caroline Miller: Lamb in His Bosom, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel. Mourning Dove: Coyote Stories. Julia Ross Newberry: Julia Newberry's Diary.
Hortense Powdermaker, anthropologist: Life in Lesu.
1933
U.S. Congress votes that the Philippines should be independent. Thirteen million Americans are unemployed. Hitler becomes chancellor of Germany and inaugurates the widescale persecution of Jews. Japan resigns from the League of Nations. Frances Perkins is named Secretary of Labor and becomes the first woman to hold a cabinet post. Ruth Bryan Owen (Rohde) becomes the first woman diplomat to represent the U.S. abroad; she serves in Denmark and Iceland as envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Dorothy Day plays a principal role in founding the "Catholic Worker" movement, which produces an anti-capitalist, anticommunist newspaper and numerous facilities providing food, shelter, and clothing for the poor. The Tennessee Valley Authority is created to con-
Women Writers in the United States * 249 TEXTS 1933
Eleanor Roosevelt (18841962), First Lady, social activist, and autobiographer: It's Up To the Women, detailing her Progressive, social feminist views. Evelyn Scott: Eva Gay, an autobiographical novel. Agnes Smedley: Chinese Destinies: Sketches of Present-Day China. Sara Teasdale: Strange Victory, a posthumously published volume of poetry. Teasdale committed suicide earlier in the year. Molly Day Thacher: Blocks, an antiwar verse drama.
CONTEXTS
1933
trol floods and sell cheap electricity. Newsweek magazine begins publication. U.S. News magazine is launched; it becomes U.S. News and World Report in 1948. Perhaps the first men's fashion magazine, Esquire, begins publication as a medium for advertising men's clothing. By this date two-thirds of American homes possess at least one radio. Disposable Tampax tampons are marketed. Ruth Wakefield bakes the first chocolate chip cookie at her Toll House Inn in Massachusetts. Jean Harlow (1911-1937), actress known for her platinum blonde hair and sexy roles, appears in Bombshell, considered by many her best film. A talented comic actress also acclaimed for her performances in Platinum Blonde (1931) md Red Dust (1932), among others, Harlow dies at age 26 of a mysterious illness.
250 * Women Writers in the United States
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TEXTS
1933
1933
I. RicePereira (19071971), known for her distinctive geometric abstractions, opens her first onewoman exhibition at the A.C.A. Gallery. Agnes Tait( 1897-1981) works as an easel painter for the Public Works of Art Project in New York. Interested in narrative and figural painting, she was involved in the "Art for the Millions" movement. Her paintings include Skating in Central Park and Olive Grove, Mallorca, as well as a mural frieze, Fruits of the Land. After World War II, she turns her attention to lithographs and illustrations for children's books. Cartoon characters Blondic and Dagwood marry.
1933-1934
1933-1934
The Twenty-first Amendment repeals prohibition.
1933-1935
1933-1935
FDR institutes the first "New Deal."
1934
Polish-German nonagression pact is signed.
1934
Zoe Akins: The Old Maid, winner of Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1935, an adaptation of a novella by Edith Wharton.
Nationwide textile strike.
Women Writers in the United States * 257 TEXTS
1934
Ruth Benedict (18871948), one of the first U.S. women to become a professional anthropologist, and teacher and friend to Margaret Mead: Patterns of Culture, a standard anthropological text for 25 years. Jessie Bernard, sociologist, with her husband Luther Lee Bernard: Sociology and the Study of International Relations. She will go on to author or co-author over twenty works of sociology, including many that examine women's roles. Clair Blank begins the Beverly Gray "College Mysteries." Kay Boyle: My Next Bride, a novel. Sophonisba Breckinridge: The Family and the State. Eva Emery Dye: The Soul of America: An Oregon Iliad. Mignon G. Eberhart: The Cases of Susan Dare, stories featuring a mystery writer as sleuth. Caroline Gordon: Aleck Maury, Sportsman, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1934
Florence Allen, judge, lawyer, suffragist, and spokesperson for world peace, is appointed to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, the first woman at that rank in the federal court system. The Catholic Church forms the Legion of Decency in an attempt to improve the moral standards of Hollywood films. The Hays Code is adopted to prevent Hollywood films from displaying open sensuality. Cissy Patterson becomes the first female publisher of a modern large city daily newspaper. Gertrude Atherton becomes the first woman president of the National Academy of Literature. The first strike in a publishing firm occurs after Dorothy Rimmer, a bookkeeper with the firm of Macaulay Company, is fired for trying to enlist fellow workers to join the Office Workers Union; although the strike is called off after all the workers, including Rimmer, are re-
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1934
Lillian Hellman (19051984), playwright and autobiographer: The Children's Hour, a play, runs for 691 performances on Broadway. Josephine Herbst: The Executioner Waits, second in her Depression-era trilogy. Zora Neale Hurston (c. 1901-1960), African American anthropologist, novelist, and short-story writer: Jonah's Gourd Vine. Alice James (1848-1892): The Diary of Alice James, recording her shrewd observations of her famous brothers, her awareness of her impending death from breast cancer, and her philosophical ruminations, appears posthumously after being suppressed by the James family for many years. Josephine Winslow Johnson, novelist, short-story writer, and painter: Now in November, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of life on a Midwestern farm.
1934
hired and the firm agrees to collective bargaining, three months later, four female employees, all members of the Office Workers Union, are fired; another strike is called and by the time of its resolution, the drive toward organization is sweeping through all the major publishing houses. The influential journal Partisan Review is founded; it folds in 1936 and is reorganized in 1937. The first coin-operated laundry—called a "washateria" —opens in Fort Worth, Texas. Bonnie Parker and her partner-in-crime Clyde Barrow are gunned down in Louisiana. Actress Bette Davis (1908-1989) receives her first Oscar nomination for Of Human Bondage; by the time she leaves Warner Brothers in 1949 she has made 49 films for the studio and is still to star in such acclaimed films as All About Eve (1950) or Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1961)!
Women Writers in the United States * 253
TEXTS 1934
CONTEXTS
Mary Johnston: Drury Randall, a novel.
1934
Jazz singer Billie Holiday (1915-1959) teams up with saxophonist Lester Young and together they produce some of the most highly regarded jazz recordings ever.
1934-1935
Italian-Ethopian War.
Jessie B. Rittenhouse: My House of Life, an autobiography. Tess Slesinger (19001975), novelist, shortstory writer, and screenwriter: The Unpossessed, a Modernist novel. Betty Smith (1904-1972), novelist, playwright: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Gertrude Stein: Portraits and Prayers. Ruth Suckow (18921960), regionalist (Midwest) novelist and shortstory writer: The Folks. Genevieve Taggard: Not Mine to Finish, a collection of poetry. Edith Wharton: A Backward Glance, a memoir. Audrey Wurdemann (1911-1960), poet: Bright Ambush, winner of the 1935 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. 1934-1935 *
*
*
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1935
Pearl Buck becomes the first U.S. woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize in literature. Olive Dargan: A Stone Came Rolling, a novel. Josefina Excajeda, Chicana short-story writer: "Tales from San Elizario," in J. Frank Dobie, ed., Puro Mexico. Charlotte Perkins Oilman: The Living of Charlotte Perkins Oilman, a posthumous autobiography. Ellen Glasgow: Vein of Iron, a novel. Zora Neale Hurston: Mules and Men, a collection of folktales, songs, children's games, prayers and sermons, and hoodoo practices. Haruto Ishimoto, Japanese American autobiographer: Facing Two Ways: The Story of My Life. Rose Wilder Lane (18861968), novelist, shortstory writer, political essayist: Old Home Town, a collection of stories about
1935
The National Council of Negro Women is established, and Mary McLeod Bethune is elected president; the following year Bethune becomes director of the Division of Negro Affairs for the National Youth Administration. Theater Director Hallie Flanagan (1889-1969) is chosen to head the New Deal's Federal Theater Project (FTP), which loses funding in 1939. Employing 12,000 to 15,000 people, the organization produces more than 900 works seen by over 15 million people across the country. Several other women, including Rosamond Gilder, Madalyn O'Shea, Kate Drain Lawson, Susan Glaspell, and Rose McClendon, hold important administrative jobs in the project. Romaine Brooks (18741970), portraitist, exhibits at the Arts Club of Chicago. Longtime companion of Natalie Barney, Brooks lives for many years as an expatriate in Paris. Many of her portraits have lesbians as their subject. Titles include Una, Lady Trou-
Women Writers in the United States * 255 TEXTS
1935
women in a midwestern town. Meridel LeSueur, novelist, journalist, poet closely associated with prairie populists and Marxists: "Annunciation," a story in which an expectant mother meditates on her pregnancy and the world awaiting the child. Mabel Dodge Luhan (1879-1962), memoirist: Winter in Taos. Grace Lumpkin: A Sign for Cain, a proletarian novel. Marianne Moore: Selected Poems. Lola Ridge: Dance of Fire, a volume of poetry. Muriel Rukeyser (19131980), poet and political activist: Theory of Flight, a collection of poems, winner of the Yale Younger Poets award.
CONTEXTS
1935
bridge, The Crossing, The Masked Archer, and Miss Natalie Barney, "L'Amazone." Patsy Montana's "I Want to be a Cowboy's Sweetheart" becomes the first million-selling country song by a woman. Aunt Molly Jackson, who claimed to be the inspiration for "Pistol Packin' Mama," begins recording folk songs for the Library of Congress Archive of Folk Song. The union organizer and acclaimed ballad singer eventually records 150 songs for the project. The Social Security Act provides federal employment, old age insurance, and social welfare for dependent women and children. The communist League of American Writers is founded. Harlem race riots occur.
Mari Sandoz (18961966), whose writings are characterized by a mingling of biography, autobiography, history, and fiction, begins her six-
Senator Huey Long is assassinated. Penguin Books is founded.
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TEXTS 1935
volume Great Plains series with Old Jules.
1935
Tess Slesinger: On Being Told That Her Second Husband Has Taken His First Lover and Other Stories.
Sophie Tucker (1884?1966), best known for her work in vaudeville, becomes the first woman president of the American Federation of Actors. Comedienne Marian Jordan (1898 -1961) begins 17 years as Molly on the popular radio show Fibber McGee and Molly.
Gertrude Stein: Lectures in America and Narration. Anna Louise Strong (1885-1970), radical journalist and autobiographer: / Change Worlds: The Remaking of an American. Ktsu Tnagaki Sugimoto: Grandmother 0 Kyo, an autobiography. Mary TIeaton Vorse (1874-1966), journalist and correspondent who reports extensively on labor issues, novelist: A Footnote to Folly, autobiography. Gale Wilhelm: We Too Are Drifting, a novel about a young lesbian artist's relationships. 1935-1938
1935-1938
Second New Deal.
1935-1941
1935-1941
Under the Works Progress Administration, especially through the Federal Writers', Arts, and Theater Projects, women find
Women Writers in the United States * 257 TEXTS
1935-1941
1936
Harriette Arnow (19081986), Appalachian novelist and social historian: Mountain Path. Djuna Barnes: Nightwood, a novel. Kay Boyle: Death of a Man, a novel indicting Nazism. Anne Frierson: Quagmire, a Gullah drama. Frances Parkinson Keyes (1885-1970), novelist, magazine contributor, political analyst ("Letters from a Senator's Wife"): Honor Bright, a novel. Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987), playwright, diplomat, feminist: The Women, a social satire, runs for over 500 performances. Margaret Mitchell (19001949), Southern novelist: Gone With the Wind. The novel is released by Macmillan at a list price of $3; department stores of-
CONTEXTS 1935-1941
economic relief from the Depression. Overall; however, less than 20 percent of all WPA workers are female; 3 percent are African American females.
1936
The American Labor Party is formed. A Gallop poll finds that 82 percent of those questioned say women with employed husbands should not be allowed to work. Of the women surveyed, 75 percent agree. Reva Beck Bosons becomes Utah's first woman judge and is later elected congresswoman. In West Coast Hotel v. Parrisk, the Supreme Court reverses earlier decisions and rules that women are entitled to a miniinum wage. In United States v. One Package, a federal appeals court overturns the Coinstock law's provisions against contraception. Mary McLeod Bethune, black school founder, civic leader, club woman, is appointed director of minority affairs in the
258 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1936
fcr the volume for less, setting off a huge price war. It sells a million copies in six months, 50,000 in a single day. The runaway best-seller wins the Pulitzer Prize in 1937. Kathleen Moore Morehouse: Rain on the Just, a novel of Appalachia. Josefina Niggli (19101983), Mexican American playwright, short-story writer, and folklorist: Soldadera: A One-Act Play of the Mexican Revolution. Anai's Nin (1903-1977), novelist and memoirist: House of Incest, a novel. Dorothy Parker: Not So Deep as a Well, poetry. Irna Phillips (1901-1973), as writer and creator of dozens of radio and television soap operas, earns the title "Queen of the Soaps." Gertrude Stein: The Geographical History of America. Mary Dallas Street, poet and novelist: At Summer's End.
CONTEXTS 1936
New Deal's National Youth Association, Max Factor, a Hollywood cosmetic organization that created the "make-up for the stars," goes international when it opens a saIon in London, Life magazine begins publication. Margaret Bourke-White (1906-1971) is one of the firstwomen and among the most notable of photojournalists. A creator of the photographic essay genre, she does Life's first cover photo arid photo essay. FDR is re-elected. Ella Fitzgerald becomes one of the country's top jazz vocalists while still a teenager, Dorothea Lange (18951965), photographer, documents effects of the Depression in rural areas in such works as Migrant Mother, California, 1936.
Women Writers in the United States * 259 TEXTS
CONTEXTS
1936-1937
1936-1937
Luise Rainier wins the Best Actress Oscar two years in a row for The Great Ziegfeld and The Good Earth.
1936-1939
1936-1939
The Spanish Civil War begins; it ends in 1939 with the beginning of Franco's dictatorship.
1937
North Carolina becomes the first state to fund the provision of contraceptives with tax dollars; racism is said to have played a major role in the decision.
1937
Anita Blackmon: Murder a la Richelieu. Rachel Crothers: Susan and God, her final play. Dorothy Fields (19041974), lyricist, becomes the first woman to win an Oscar for songwriting; she receives it for "The Way You Look Tonight," from the movie Swing Time. Caroline Gordon: None Shall Look Back and The Garden of Adonis, novels. Karen Horney (1885 1952), psychiatrist and psychoanalyst specializing in female sexuality and psychology: The Neurotic Personality of Our Time. Zora Neale Hurston: Their Eyes Were Watching God, an extremely influential novel.
Amelia Earhart, recordbreaking pilot, is lost en route in her attempt to fly westbound around the world. The American Association of University Presses adopts its constitution. Woman V Day magazine appears in October. It begins as a three-cent monthly women's service magazine published by A&P grocery for distribution in its stores. Augusta Savage (1892— 1962), African American sculptor and one of the most important artists of the Harlem Renaissance,
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1937
Margaret Morse Nice (1883-1974), ornithologist: Studies in the Life of the Song Sparrow, an influential two-volume work, the second of which appears in 1943. Charlotte Murray Russell: Tiny Diamond, the first of several mysteries featuring Jane Edwards, an unmarried midwestern woman sleuth in her forties. Evelyn Scott: Background in Tennessee, a memoir. Gertrude Stein: Everybody '.r Autobiography. Gladys Bagg Taber (1899-1980), novelist and magazine columnist, writes "Diary of Domesticity" for the Ladies' Home Journal. Sara Teasdale: Collected Poems, posthumously published. Dorothy Thompson, outspoken anti-Nazi, begins writing regular columns for the Ladies' Home Journal. Edith Wharton: Ghosts, a collection of short stories.
1937
is named the first director of the Harlem Community Art Center. Two years later she is the only black artist asked to contribute art to the World's Fair, at which she exhibits The Harp. Billie Holiday performs with the Count Basie band. Public Opinion Quarterly, the principal journal of the polling industry, is founded.
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Marguerite Young (19081995), novelist, poet, historian, and editor: Prismatic Ground, poetry.
1937
1938
Kay Boyle: Monday Night and Bridegroom's Body, novels.
1938
Dorothy Day: From Union Square to Rome, autobiography.
Some 10.4 million Americans are unemployed. Three hundred birth control clinics are in operation across the country.
Marion Rice Hart: Who Called That Lady a Skipper? The Strange Voyage of a Woman Navigator, a memoir.
A gender-neutral Fair Labor Standards Act is passed; it also indirectly establishes the government's right to legislate child labor.
Helen McCloy, writer of mystery fiction combined with social satire: Dance of Death. She creates one of the first psychiatrist detectives.
Crystal Dreda Bird Fauset is elected to the Philadelphia state legislature and becomes the first known African American woman in the U.S. to so serve.
Josefina Niggli: Mexican Folk Plays.
The House of Representatives establishes a special committee to investigate un-Americanism; it becomes a regular committee in 1945.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (1896-1953): The Yearling, winner of 1939 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Laura Riding (19011991), poet, novelist, critic: Collected Poems. Elizabeth Madox Roberts: Black Is My Truelove's Hair, a novel.
Chicana feminist, librarian, and civil rights activist Martha Cotera is born. Edith Head, fashion and set designer, becomes the head of the design department at Paramount, the first woman to head such
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1938
Eleanor Roosevelt: My Days, an autobiography. Margaret Sanger: Margaret Sanger, an autobiography. Emma L. Shields and Helen D. Wemple: Knit One, Purl One: A Little Girl's Knitting and Crochet Book. Agnes Smedley: China Fights Back: An American Woman with the Eighth Route Army. Gertrude Stein: Picasso. Gale Wilhelm: Torchlight to Valhalla, a novel. Marya Zaturenska wins the Pulitzer Prize for poetry for Cold Morning Sky. Leane Zugsmith: The Summer Soldier, a novel.
1938
a department at a major studio. She earns more than 1000 screen credits, 32 Academy Award nominations, and eight Academy Awards. Billie Holiday tours with the all-white Artie Shaw band; she is met with so much racism and segregation—forced to use service elevators, to stay in separate hotels— she finally quits. Beatrice Fox Auerbach becomes president of G. Fox & Company in Hartford, Connecticut, a position she holds through 1965. She increases the business tenfold, making it the largest privately owned department store in the country, and pioneers such labor programs as the five-day week, retirement plans, medical and nonprofit lunch facilities for employees, and a revolving fund to lend employees interest-free money in times of personal crisis. Fox's is also the first large department store to hire black employees for positions which offered advancement. Black women trade unionists form the International
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1938
1938
Ladies' Auxiliary of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first black women's international labor organization. Sixteen African American women in Philadelphia found Jack & Jill of America to sponsor cultural events and opportunities for children. A Ladies' Home Journal poll finds that 79 percent of American women approve of contraceptive use. The National Organization for Decent Literature is founded to raise the standards of print media. Orson Welles broadcasts H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds over the radio, causing a panic. Claire McCardell designs a tent dress ("the Monastic"), which soon becomes a fashion hit and launches "the American Look."
1939
Dorothy Day: House of Hospitality, autobiography. Elizabeth Dean: Murder Is a Collector's Item, the first of several mysteries featuring Emma Marsh, an ama-
1939
The Birth Control Federation of America, later Planned Parenthood of America, proposes a "Negro Project," believing that "the mass of Negroes . . . particularly in the
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1939
teur detective who enjoys New York's nightlife.
1939
South, still breed carelessly and disastrously."
Anne Walter Fearn, worker for social reform in both the American South and China: My Days of Strength.
Sixty-four percent of white southerners surveyed think lynching is justified in cases of sexual assault.
Muriel Follett: New England Year: A Journal of Vermont Farm, Life.
Eleanor Patterson founds the Washington TimesHerald; four years later it becomes the city's largest paper, although what many considered her ruthlessness leads Time magazine to label her "the most hated woman in America."
Rose Franken (18951988), playwright, novelist, short-story writer, and scriptwriter: Claudia: The Story of a Marriage, first of eight in a very popular series; first dramatized in 1941. Shirley Graham (19071977), African American biographer, playwright, and advocate of human rights: It's Morning. Lillian Hellman: The Little Foxes, a play. Josephine Herbst: Rope of Gold, the third volume in her Depression-era trilogy.
The Kenyan Review, a quarterly magazine at Kenyon College under John Crowe Ransom's editorship, begins publishing and is an influential purveyor of the "New Criticism." Approximately 48 million radio sets have been sold. Pocket Books is founded.
Karen Horney: New Ways in Psychoanalysis.
Cup-sizing for brassieres is designed by Warners' employee Leona Gross Lax.
Zora Neale Hurston: Moses, Man of the Mountain.
The "Lambeth Walk," first performed in 1909 by
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1939
Cleofas Jaramillo, Chicana writer, autobiographer, and folklorist: The Genuine New Mexico Tasty Recipes. Agnes Newton Keith, travel writer and memoirist on experiences in Asia and Africa: Land Below the Wind, bestseller describing life in Borneo. Adet, Anor, and Meimei Lin: Our Family, memoir by Chinese American sisters aged 16, 13, and 8, respectively. Grace Lumpkin: The Wedding, a social comedy. Josephine Miles (19111985), poet and scholar: Lines at Intersection, poetry. Dorothy Parker: Here Lies, a collection of her short stories. Katherine Anne Porter: Pale Horse, Pale Rider: Three Short Novels. Craig Rice, the pen name of Georgiana Ann Randolph Craig (1908-1957), who also writes under the names of Michael Ven-
CONTEXTS 1939
dancer Daphne Polk, becomes a popular dance step. Hattie McDaniel (1895?1952), radio comedy star and film actress, becomes the first African American to win an Academy Award; she is awarded the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her work in Gone With the Wind. Among the exhibits at the World's Fair in New York are two extremely popular futuristic ones: "Democracity," which envisions an increase in leisure time and a highly structured means of organizing it, and the General Motors building, which represents American life in 1960 as an era defined by its ingenious technological innovations. World War II begins. Hitler invades Czechoslovakia and Poland; the German-Russian nonaggression pact is signed. A border war is ongoing between Japan and Russia in Manchuria. When African American opera singer Marian
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ning and Daphne Savinders, and ghost-writes novels for several actors, including Gypsy Rose Lee and George Sanders: 8 Faces at 3, the first of 20 mysteries. She also writes more than 60 short stories, a true-crime book, a gothic, and many radio scripts. She is especially known for her screwball comedy mysteries.
CONTEXTS 1939
Jane Matilda Bolin is appointed to a judgeship in New York City, becoming the first African American female appointed judge in the U.S.
May Sarton (1912-1995), poet, playwright, novelist, memoirist: Inner Landscape, poetry. Gertrude Stein: The World Is Round, herfirst book for children.
Maria Montoya Martinez (1884-1981), a Pueblo Indian artist, works backward from pottery shards found at archaeological sites in order to recreate pottery designs of her ancestors.
Jean Thomas, folklorist who becomes known as "The Traipsin' Woman," founder of the American Folk Song Festival: Ballad Makin' in the Mountains of Kentucky. 1940s
Vice Versa, probably the first lesbian journal in the United States, is typed and mimeographed by a secretary during regular working hours; she uses the anagram Lisa Ben.
Anderson's concert is canceled by the Daughters of the American Revolution, Eleanor Roosevelt resigns her DAR membership and arranges a new concert for Anderson at the Lincoin Memorial. Anderson's concert transforms an ugly racial incident into an affirmation of human rights,
1940s
Plucked eyebrows and bright red lips are a popular look, fashioned after movie stars such as Marlene Dietrich,
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1940
Kay Boyle: Crazy Hunter, a novel. Janet Planner (18921978), journalist and essayist: An American in Paris. Inglis Fletcher (18791969), historical novelist: Raleigh's Eden, the beginning of her Carolina series. Frances Gaither: Follow the Drinking Gourd. Mildred Haun (19111966), Appalachian writer: The Hawk's Done Gone; reissued in 1967 with previously unpublished stories. Dorothy B. Hughes, mystery writer named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America: The So Blue Marble. Helena Kuo (Kuo Chin ch'iu), Chinese American essayist, novelist, and autobiographer: Peace Path, essays about women and Chinese culture. Gypsy Rose Lee (1914?1970), well-known striptease entertainer: The G-String Murders, a bestselling murder mystery, filmed in 1943.
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Battle of Britain. Trotsky is assassinated in Mexico. Total population is 132,122,000; 33 percent (44 million people) live at or below poverty level. Some 85.9 percent of all adult female workers are nonwhite. There arc 2,412,000 servants in the U.S. Thirty three percent of all white working women hold clerical jobs, compared with only 1.3 percent of all black female workers. Dorothy Arzner directs her best-known film, Dance, Girl, Dance. "Grandma" Anna Mary Moses (1860-1961), primitivist painter, has her first one-woman show at 80 years of age. She is an immediate popular success. Thirty-one percent of all black households are headed by a woman. Life expectancy is up to an average of 64 years from 49 years in 1900.
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1940
Meridel LeSueur: Salute to Spring, collection of journalism and stories. Frances and Richard Lockridge introduce their extremely popular husbandand-wife detective team Pam and Jerry North in The Norths Meet Murder. It is later turned into a popular radio series. Carson McCullers (1919™ 1967), southern novelist, short-story writer, playwright: The Heart Js a Lonely Hunter, a novel. Elizabeth Madox Roberts: Songs in the Meadow, a collection of poetry. Beryl Simons: Jane Carberry: Detective. Gertrude Stein: Ida, a Novel. Gladys Bagg Taber: Harvest at Stillmeadoiv. Mary Church Terrell (1863-1896), African American author and civil rights leader: A Colored Woman in a White World, autobiography. Ola Elizabeth Winslow: Jonathan Edwards, winner
1940
Diethylstilbestrol (DES) is approved for human use and prescribed for women to prevent complications during pregnancy; some 2 to 3 million mothers take this drug, especially during the 1940s and 1950s; in 1971, studies reveal that it can cause vaginal and cervical cancer, especially in the daughters born to these mothers. A little more than half of American households have some sort of built-in bathing equipment; one-third are still cooking with wood or coal; and only one-third have central heating. Since 1910, high school enrollment has increased by 540 percent, college enrollment by 321 percent. Black women in the northern cities have an average of 3 children and white women have 2; in the rural South, 5.5 children are born to black women and 5 to white women. Ida Fuller of Vermont becomes the first recipient of a Social Security check. Sarah Ophelia Colley begins her long career as
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of the Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1941.
CONTEXTS 1940
"Minnie Pearl," the "Queen of Country Comedy" and a favorite on the Grand Ole Opry. She is named Nashville Woman of the Year in 1965 and is elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1968. Dale (Dalia) Messick begins the long-running cartoon strip Brenda Starr. FDR is elected to a third term. First appearing under the title Calling All Girls, the country's first successful magazine for teenaged girls appears and undergoes several name changes, including Polly Pigtails and Young Miss, before settling on KM in 1992.
1940-1947
1940-1947
The name "Rosie the Riveter" is coined to refer to women employed in the American defense industries during World War II; out of the peak figure of 19.5 million "Rosies," 15.9 million had been employed before the war.
1940-1950
1940-1950
White women's employment increases from 24.5 percent to 28.4 percent;
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1941
Grace Abbott (18781939), social activist and head of the U.S. Children's Bureau from 1921 to 1934: From Relief to Social Security. Sally Benson (19001972): Junior Miss, sliceof-life story focusing particularly on the socialization of a young girl. Louise Bogan: Poems and New Poems. M.F.K. Fisher (19081992), autobiographer who emphasizes culinary experience: Consider the Oyster. Ellen Glasgow: In This Our Life, winner of 1942 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Bernice Kelly Harris (1893-1973), novelist of rural and small-town life: Portulaca. Lillian Hellman: Watch on the Rhine, wins New York Drama Critics Circle Award for best American drama of the season. Karen Horney founds the American Journal of Psycho{analysis.
1940-1950
black women's remains stable at 32 percent.
1941
Fifty-two percent of American families have mechanical refrigerators and/or washing machines. Avon Pocket-Size Books first appear. Hitler begins the systematic extermination of Jews in Europe. President Roosevelt forms the Fair Employment Practices Committee. In United States v. Classic, the Supreme Court rules that the right to vote in primaries as well as general elections is extended to blacks by the Constitution. Lena Home, African American singer, actress, and activist, becomes the first black woman to sign a term contract in film. Louise Nevelson (19001988), known for her surrealist collages and as a pioneer of environmental sculpture, has the first of her five one-woman shows in New York City. Black civil rights activist Irene Gaines leads the
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Margaret Leech: Reveille in Washington, winner of Pulitzer Prize for history in 1942. Janet Lewis: The Wife of Martin Guerre, historical fiction. Adet, Anor, and Meimei Lin: Dawn over Chungking, memoir. Carson McCullers: Reflections in a Golden Eye, a novel. Helen Maclnnes (19071985), suspense novelist: Above Suspicion. F,dna St. Vincent Millay: Collected Sonnets. Sumie Seo Mishima, Japanese American autobiographer: My Narrow Isle: The Story of a Modern Woman in Japan. Mary O'Hara (18851980), novelist, screenwriter: My Friend Flicka. Coincident with escalating tensions with Japan, Mary Oyaina, a Japanese American newspaper columnist and co-founder of the League of Nisei Artists and Writers, stops writing her advice to the lovelorn
CONTEXTS 1941
fight for an executive order banning discrimination in federal employment. Pearl Harbor is bombed by Japan; the U.S. declares war on Japan; Germany and Italy declare war on the U.S. The Victory Book Campaign is launched shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor and under the slogan "We Want Books" begins a drive to collect books for men and women in the armed forces. Isabel Bishop is known for the complex painting Dante and Virgil in Union Square (1932) and for her paintings of secretaries and shopgirls on their lunchbreaks, such as Tidying Up. In 1946 she becomes the first woman officer of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Tarpe Mills begins her Miss Fury comic strip. When it begins appearing in comic book form, it sells over a million copies per issue.
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column for the San Francisco New World Sun. The column, which she began writing in the mid-193Os, often served as a forum for Oyama's reflections on what it meant to be Nisei (second generation immigrant) in the U.S. Josephine Pinckney (1895-1957), novelist, poet, much of whose work focuses on life in Charleston, S.C.: Hilton Head. Elizabeth Madox Roberts: Not By Strange Gods. Aiiya Seton (1916-1990), author of historical/biographical novels: My Theodosia. Sophie Tread well: Hope for a Harvest, a drama of bigotiy and environmental waste set in California. Janet Camp Troxell: The Home Front: Five Hundred Ways to Save Time, Labor, and Money. Eudora Welty, prolific southern author of novels, short stories, and memoirs: A Curtain of Green, collection of stories.
CONTEXTS 1941
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Charlotte Armstrong (1905-1969), after writing poems and two plays, goes on to produce numerous—and very popular — mystery and suspense novels: Lay On, Mac Duff! is her first in this genre. Sally Benson: Meet Me in St. Louis, short stories about a young girl and her family at the time of the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition. Margaret Farrar (18971942), the first woman to write a crossword puzzle book, becomes the first woman editor of the New York Times crossword puzzles. Esther Forbes (18911967), novelist and biographer, first woman member of the American Antiquarian Society: Paul Revere and the World He Lived In, winner of 1943 Pulitzer Prize for history; her Johnny Tremaine, a fictionalized retelling of Paul Revere, is published in 1943. Zora Neale Hurston: Dust Tracks on a Road, autobiography.
CONTEXTS 1942
President Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9066, ordering the military to handle the evacuation of all Japanese from the Pacific Coast and their placement in internment camps; some 110,000 Japanese Americans are interned on the West Coast. More than 800 birth control clinics exist across the country. The WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service), the U.S. Navy's Women's Corps, and SPAR (from the Coast Guard motto, Semper Paratus, "Always Ready") the U.S. Coast Guard's Women's Corps, are formed. The Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) is formed; in 1943, WAAC is abolished and the Women's Army Corps (WAG) is established. While WAAC granted women partial military status, WAC gives women the opportunity to attain the same rank, titles, and pay as their male counterparts. Nancy Marker Love becomes squadron com-
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1942
Emily Kimbrough (18991989), editor (Ladies' Home Journal), humorist, travel writer: Our Hearts Were Young and Gay, with Cornelia Otis Skinner, actress, humorist, and biographer. Helena Kuo: I've Come a Long Way, autobiography. Susanne K. Langer (1895-1985), philosopher: Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbols of Reason, Rite, and Art, bestselling and influential study of aesthetics.
1942
mander of the Women's Auxiliary Flying Services, founded on September 10, 1942. In 1943 it merges with the Women's Flying Training Detachment to form Women's Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). Jacqueline Cochrane — the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound (1953)-heads the WASPs, which ferries planes across the U.S. during the War. The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) is founded.
Mary McCarthy (19121989), essayist and fiction writer: The Company She Keeps.
Margaret Bourke-White becomes the first woman war correspondent.
Margaret Millar, Canadian-born novelist known for psychological mysteries: The Devil Loves Me.
Clare Boothe Luce is elected to the House of Representatives. In 1953, she is appointed ambassador to Italy.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: Cross Creek, a memoir.
Peggy Guggenheim opens the "Art of This Century" gallery in New York City, a showplace for modern art.
Han Suyin, Chinese American novelist, autobiographer, and biographer: Destination Chungking.
Dell Books is formed; all the book divisions of Delacorte publishing, including Dell, Delta, Yearling, Candlelight, Purse, Heri-
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1942
Margaret Walker, African American poet and novelist: For My People, first book of poetry by an African American to receive the Yale Younger Poets Award.
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tage Press, and Dial Press, are presided over by Helen Meyer, who becomes president of Delacorte in 1979. Dover Publications is established. Movie star Carole Lombard, wife of actor Clark Gable, is killed along with her mother and 20 other passengers in a plane crash near Las Vegas while on a tour promoting war bonds. The American Birth Control League changes its name to Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. (PPFA), hoping that "parenthood" would appeal to a larger segment of the population than did the controversial "birth control."
1943
Jane Bowles (1917-1973), fiction writer and playwright: Two Serious Ladies, a novel. Vera Caspary (1899?1987), novelist, screenplay writer, and journalist: Laura, a mystery novel; it is made into a classic Hollywood film the next year. Caspary is blacklisted during the McCarthy era.
1943
For the first time, the U.S. Army commissions female doctors. Race riots occur in Mobile, Alabama; Detroit, Michigan; and the Harlem section of New York City, among other places. Nellie Nelson becomes the first woman elected
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M.F.K. Fisher: The Gastronomical Me, a collection of food-centered autobiographical essays. Ellen Glasgow: A Certain Measure: An Interpretation of Prose Fiction. Elizabeth Janeway, shortstory writer, novelist, feminist: The Walsh Girls, a novel. Ilui-lan Koo, Chinese American autobiographer: Hui-lan Koo: An Autobiography. Janet Lewis: Against a Darkening Sky. Adet Lin: Flame from the Rock, a novel. Edna St. Vincent Millay: Collected lyrics. Jeanette Covert Nolan: Final Appearance, a mystery. Ayn Rand (1905-1982), Russian-born novelist: The Fountainhead. Craig Rice: Having Wonderful Crime, one of her most noted comic mysteries.
1943
president of the American I listorical Association. The All-American Girl's Professional Baseball League is formed due to the depletion of male baseball players in World War II. Among its most noted players were Dorothy "Kammie" Kamenshek, of the Rockford Peaches, a seven-time AllStar; Doris Sams of the Muskegon-Kalamazoo Lassies; and Jean Eaut, of the South Bend Blue Sox. The league is particularly popular in the Midwest; play continues into the mid-'SOs. A fictionalized version of their story is told in the popular 1993 film, A League of Their Oivn. The Council on Books in Wartime announces that it will send some 35 million fictional and nonfictional works—Armed Services Editions —to men and women in the armed forces overseas during the following year: among those included in the first shipment is Margaret Carpenter's mystery, Experiment Perilous; by war's end, more than 108,500,000 copies of
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Lin Tai-yi, Chinese American novelist: War Tide.
1943
these editions have been produced. The war-induced fabric shortages lead to simple, practical fashions.
Eudora Welty: The Wide Net, collection of stories, and The Robber Bridegroom.
The "Jitterbug" and variations like the "Lindy Hop" are the most popular dances of the year.
Phyllis Whitney, popular and sophisticated author of children's mysteries, adult mysteries, and Gothic romances: The Red Carnelian. Tan Yun, Chinese American novelist: Flame from the Rock. 1943-1944
1944
Doris Bell Collier Ball, physician and mystery novelist writing under the pseudonym Josephine Bell: Death at the Medical Board. Mary Coyle Chase (19071981), Colorado play-
1943-1944
Actress Betty Grable (1916-1973) is the only woman to appear on two consecutive annual Motion Picture Herald's polls of the top movie box-office attractions. In the mid'40s, she will become the highest salaried American woman of her time, earning $300,000 a year.
1944
Margaret O'Brien receives a special Academy Award for the "outstanding child actress of the year." Nell Blaine, painter known for her brilliantly colored landscapes and still lifes, becomes the
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wright: Harvey, featuring an invisible rabbit, begins a run of 1775 performances; it wins the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1945. A popular movie based on the play appears in 1950. Alice Mary Ross Colver: Fourways: A Novel. Frances Gaither: The Red Cock Crows.
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youngest member of the American Abstract Artists. Normandy Invasion. Paper shortages caused by the war force publishers to take a 25 percent cut in their supply; books are released on lighter paper with narrower margins and more words per page; many older titles go out of print because of the shortage.
Jean Garrigue (19141972), poet: Thirty six Poems, and a Few Songs.
Sue S. Dauser becomes the first woman appointed captain in the U.S. Navy.
Ruth Gordon (18961985), dramatist and comic actress: Over Twenty-one, a farce.
Roosevelt is elected to a fourth term; he dies in 1945 and Harry S. Truman becomes President.
Helena Kuo: Westward to Chungking, a novel, and Giants of Earth, a collection of biographical sketches.
In Smith v. Allwright, the Supreme Court finds the all-white political primary unconstitutional.
RosePesotta (18961965), Jewish American author and labor organizer: Bread upon the Waters. Katherine Anne Porter: The Leaning Tower and Other Stories.
Helen Mary (Gahagan) Douglas (1900-1980), former Broadway star and opera singer and wife of actor Melvyn Douglas, is elected to Congress from California. Sixty percent of domestic workers are black women; the 13 percent increase since 1940 can largely be
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Craig Rice: Home Sweet Homicide, a combined mystery and autobiography.
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1944
accounted for by white women quitting such jobs with the end of the Depression.
Anya Seton: Dragonwyck. For the first time, Chinese women are allowed to enter the country with no restrictions.
Lillian Smith (18971966), novelist, civil rights advocate: Strange Fruit, banned in Boston and Detroit for its treatment of miscegenation and abortion. The next year the Superior Court of Massachusetts declares the novel a menace to young people's morals.
The first large-scale automatic digital computer, conceived in 1937, is finally completed; between 1943 and 1945, an army team develops the first all-electronic general purpose computer.
Mai-mai Sze: China.
Seventeen magazine begins publication.
Kathleen Winsor, novelist: Forever Amber, an enormous best-seller set in Restoration England. It is banned in Massachusetts due to its sexual content; the ban is lifted by a high court in 1947.
"Don't Fence Me In" is a popular song.
Marguerite Young: Moderate Fables, poetry. 1944-1945
H.D. (Hilda Doolittle): Trilogy, epic poem.
1944-1945
1945
Grace Abbott: The Child and the State, a study of child welfare issues.
1945
Vera Caspary: Bedelia, a novel
Three million to 3.5 million women union members are active in the U.S. Harry S. Truman becomes President.
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1945
Susan Glaspell: Judd Rankin's Daughter, a novel. Elizabeth Hardwick, critic, editor, and novelist: The Ghostly Lover. Bernice Kelly Harris (1892-1973), playwright and novelist: Sage Quarter. Bowen Ingram, pen name of Mildred Prewett Ingram (1925-1981), Tennessee novelist and shortstory writer: If Passion Flies. Betty MacDonald (19081958), humorist: The Egg and 7, which was filmed in 1947, the first picture to feature Ma and Pa Kettle. Josefina Niggli: Mexican Village, a collection of stories and perhaps the first work of fiction by a Mexican American to reach a large audience. Santha Rama Rau, Indian American autobiographer and novelist: Home to India. Gertrude Stein: Wars I Have Seen, her final memoir.
1945
U.S. drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. WWII ends; a peace conference is held in Paris in 1946. The United Nations is founded. Alaska passes an AntiDiscrimination Bill, legislating against unfair treatment of Alaskan Natives, largely due to the efforts of Elizabeth Peratrovich, a member of the Raven clan of the Tlingit Indians of Southeast Alaska. A study conducted by economists at Bryn Mawr college finds that, per week, farm women spend 60.55 hours on housework, women in smaller cities spend 78.35 hours, and in larger cities, women spend 80.57 —this despite the alleged benefits of urban electrification and advanced technology. For the first time, Harvard Medical School admits women (12) to its freshman class. Ebony magazine is founded.
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1945
Goldie Stone, Jewish American author: My Caravan of Years: An Autobiography.
CONTEXTS 1945
Jessamyn West (1902?1984), novelist, shortstory writer: The Friendly Persuasion.
Mahalia Jackson (19111972), African American singer known as the "Queen of Gospel Music," achieves fame with "Move on Up a Little Higher," which sells over a million copies. She is later active in the civil rights movement.
Jade Snow Wong: Fifth Chinese Daughter, autobiography by a Chinese American woman. Marguerite Young: Angel in the Forest, a history of two early-19th-century Utopian communities.
Mary Ritter Beard: Woman as Force in History. Ruth Benedict: The Chrysanthemum and the Sword, a study of Japan. Elizabeth Bishop (19111979), poet: North & South, winner of Houghton Mifflin Poetry Award. Kay Boyle: A Frenchman Must Die, a novel about the French Resistance.
Bantam Books is organized. Dorothy Rodgers, married to composer Richard Rodgers, patents the "Jonny Mop" toilet cleaning device.
Mai-mai Sze: Echo of a Cry, autobiography.
1946
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Twelve-year-old Elizabeth Taylor is acclaimed for her starring role in the film National Velvet. 1946
Federal support of childcare facilities, vital during wartime for women workers, is abruptly cut off. A Roper poll indicates that 25 percent of women would rather have been born male. In Irene Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia, the Supreme Court rules that states cannot segregate on interstate buses.
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1946
Eleanor Clark, novelist, short-fiction writer, essayist, and memoirist: The Bitter Box, a novel. Fannie Cook (18931949), novelist and painter: Mrs. Palmer's Honey, winner of the first George Washington Carver Memorial Award. Helen Eustis, Edgarwinning author: The Horizontal Award. Shirley Graham: Paul Robeson, Citizen of the World. Dorothy B. Hughes: Ride the Pink Horse, a mystery novel, later turned into a successful film. Deiiise Levertov, poet and activist: The Double Image, poetry. Anita Loos: Happy Birthday, a play. Carson McCullers: The Member of the Wedding, a novel. Patricia McGerr: Pick Your Victim. Flannery O'Connor (1925-1964), southern, Catholic novelist and
1946
When women department store workers in Oakland, California, walk out, it precipitates a city-wide general strike involving 120,000 workers. Emily Greene Balch, peace advocate, social reformer, and economist, is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Frances Xavier Cabrini becomes the first U.S. citizen declared a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. She was born in Italy but, after working in the U.S. since 1889, became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1909. Dr. Benjamin Spock publishes Baby if Child Care. Television is introduced. The "Breck Girl" makes her first appearance. Agnes DeMille (19051993), choreographer noted for her work in musicals and films including Carousel, Oklahoma!, Paint. Your Wagon, and Brigadoon, is named Woman of the Year by the American Newspaper Woman's Guild.
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1946
short-story writer, publishes her first story, "The Geranium." Mine Okuba, Japanese American autobiographer: Citizen 13660. Ann Petry, African American novelist: The Street. Craig Rice is the first woman mystery writer to be featured on the cover of Time magazine. Jo Sinclair, Jewish American novelist and journalist: Wasteland, a novel. Mary Dallas Street: Christopher Holt. Mai-mai Sze: The Tao of Painting: A Study of the Ritual Disposition of Chinese Painting, two-volume study. Genevieve Taggard: Slow Music, a collection of poetry. Lin Tai-yi: The Golden Coin, a novel. Julia Weber: My Country School Diary: An Adventure in Creative Teaching. Eudora Welty: Delta Wedding, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1946
Vivian Leigh, British actress, makes the "Cleopatra" look—black silky hair, black eyeliner and long eyelashes, red lips — popular; in 1961, Elizabeth Taylor's portrayal of the Egyptian queen on film revitalizes this look. Maya Deren (1917-1961), emigre from the Ukraine and experimentalist filmmaker known especially for her films of voodoo ceremonies, becomes the first woman to be granted a Guggenheim fellowship in motion pictures.
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1946-1964
1947
Margaret Clapp: Forgotten First Citizen: John Bigeloiv, winner of Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1948. Ruth Gordon: The Leading Lady, a play.
1946-1964
Baby boom (76,441,000 children born).
1947
Maria Tallchief, the first Native American prima ballerina, begins dancing with the New York City Ballet; she will perform with them through 1960.
Frances Parkinson Keyes: Came a Cavalier.
Cold War begins; the House Un-American Activities Committee investigates suspected Communists, including prominent Hollywood celebrities and literary figures.
Janet Lewis: The Trial ofSoren Qvist, a novel.
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is founded.
Josefina Niggli: Step Down, Elder Brother.
Ethel Percy Andrus founds the National Retired Teachers Association. Within nine years Andrus and NRTA establish the first health insurance plan for people over 65; the organization also creates an inexpensive mail-order prescription program, a retirement home, and a travel service, among other programs.
Laura Z. Hobson (19001986), Jewish American novelist: Gentleman's Agreement.
The National Council of Teachers in English publishes black educator, author, and librarian Charlemae Rollins's We Build Together, a guide to children's literature that avoids stereotypical portrayals of African Americans. Gertrude Stein: The Mother of Us All, a play based on the life of Susan B, Anthony.
Gerty T. Cori, M.D., is the first woman awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1947
Agnes Sligh Turnbull (1888-1982), novelist, short-story writer: The Bishop's Mantle, a novel.
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Rosa Lee Ingram, a widowed tenant farmer in Georgia and mother of 12, is convicted of murdering the white farmer who allegedly assaulted her. An international amnesty campaign, spearheaded by a group of prominent African American women, ends with her pardon in 1959. Elizabeth Short, a wouldbe actress, is found murdered in a vacant lot in Los Angeles, launching the famous Black Dahlia murder case, which triggers the biggest criminal hunt in L.A. history. The case remains unsolved.
1948
Judy Campbell introduces the Trixie Belden series, featuring a girl detective who differs from Nancy Drew and Judy Bolton in coming from a poor family and living in the country rather than a city. Kathryn Kenny authors some of the later volumes in the series. Anita Scott Coleman (1890-1960), African American author active during the Harlem Renaissance: Reason for Singing, poetry.
1948
As chair of the Commission on Human Rights for the United Nations, Eleanor Roosevelt creates the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Harry Truman signs the Women's Armed (Services) Integration Act, which grants women the opportunity to pursue careers in the military. Nancy C. Leftenant becomes the first African American nurse in the Army Nurse Corps.
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1948
Ethel Collins Dunham: Premature Infants: A Manual for Physicians. Inglis Fletcher: Roanoke Hundred. Lucille Fletcher writes the highly praised radio play Sorry, Wrong Number. Martha Gellhorn, journalist and novelist: The Wine of Astonishment. Zora Neale Hurston: Seraph on the Suwanee, a novel. Shirley Jackson (19161965), novelist, memoirist, and short-story writer: "The Lottery" appears in The New Yorker. Fay Kanin: Goodbye, My Fancy, a comic play. Frances Parkinson Keyes: Dinner at Antoine 's, a bestseller. Lucy Robins Lang: Tomorrow Is Beautiful. Charlotte Murray Russell: /// Met in Mexico. Cornelia Otis Skinner: Family Circle.
1948
Accompanying Harry Truman's campaign train, Alice Dunnigan becomes the first African American woman journalist to travel with a President. The last known clitoridectomy is performed in the U.S on a five-year-old girl to cure her of masturbation. Truman beats Dewey. Some 4 percent of the national labor force is made up of young workers aged 14 through 18. Architect Eleanor Raymond and chemist/engineer Maria Telkes invent and build the first solarheated house, in Dover, Massachusetts. New American Library (NAL), under two imprints, Signet and Mentor, issues its first book. The influential 3-volume Literary History of the United States, by Robert E. Spiller et al., eds., appears. The Chicago Times and the Chicago Sun merge to form the daily Chicago Sun-Times.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1948
Elizabeth Spencer, southern novelist: Fire in the Morning.
CONTEXTS
1948
Mai-mai Sze: Silent Children.
Harriette Arnow: Hunter's Horn, a novel.
Gretchen Fraser becomes the first U.S. skier to win an Olympic medal for skiing. Alice Trumbull Mason (1904-1971), an active member of the American Abstract Artists group, paints L'Hasard, an oil on masonite.
Dorothy West, African American novelist, shortstory writer, and editor active in the Harlem Renaissance: The Living Is Easy, a novel.
1949
287
Israel is founded.
1949
West Germany is formed. NATO is established.
Gwendolyn Brooks: Annie Allen, awarded the 1950 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. Brooks is the first African American recipient of the award. M.F.K. Fisher: An Alphabet for Gourmets. Frances Gaither: Double Muscadine. Barbara Howes, poet and editor for several years of Chimera: The Undersea Farmer. Muriel Rukeyser: Orpheus, poetry. Lillian Smith: Killers of the Dream, nonfiction.
Mao Tse-Tung is victorious; the People's Republic of China is founded. Eugenie Moore Anderson becomes the first U.S. woman ambassador. Burnita S. Matthews, a Truman appointee, becomes the first woman federal district judge. Harry Truman appoints Georgia Neese Clark as the first woman treasurer of the United States. The Women's Political Council (WPC), a grassroots organization of black professional women, is formed in Montgom-
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1949
Eudora Welty: The Golden Apples, collection of interrelated stories. Hisaye Yamamoto, Japanese-American writer: "Seventeen Syllables," chosen as one of the best short stories of the year.
1949
ery, Alabama, to address the city's racial problems. French feminist philosopher and author Simone deBeauvoir (1908-1986) publishes Le deuxieme sexe; in 1953, it is translated and published in English as The Second Sex and helps to provide the philosophical underpinnings of the emergent "Second Wave" of feminist activity in the U.S. Grove Press is first formed. Harlequin Enterprises is founded. The first bikini bathing suit makes its appearance. Ida Lupino (1918-1995), with her husband Collier Young, founds the Filmmakers, an independent production company. A highly successful film actress, Lupino becomes the only woman to direct a large body of work in the American commercial cinema of the 1950s as well as to direct dozens of television series episodes and pilots. Films such as Hard, fast, and Beautiful, The Bigamist, and The Hitch-
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1949
1949
hiker critique consumerism and tensions between home life and careers.
1950s
1950s
Twenty percent of unmarried women have had intercourse by the age of nineteen.
1950
Willie May "Big Mama" Thornton, blues singer and songwriter, records her own composition "Hound Dog," which later becomes a huge hit for Elvis Presley.
1950
Margaret Louise Coit: John C. Calhoun: American Portrait, winner of Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1951. Vina Delmar, after two decades without publishing any novels, begins the second phase of her career with About Mrs. Leslie. Patricia Highsmith (1921-1995), writer of psychological suspense novels: Strangers on a Train. The Chicago Police Bureau of Censorship bans A Diary of Love, by Maude Hutchins, the estranged wife of the president of the University of Chicago. Abigail Lewis: An Interesting Condition: The Diary of a Pregnant Woman. Judith Merril, sciencefiction novelist and short-
Some 27 percent of the population (41 million people) are living at or below the poverty level. Aid to Dependent Children programs become known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children. Fawcett begins to publish original paperbacks, the first to do so. There is one servant to every 42 households. Ethel Waters, blues singer, comedienne, and actress, wins the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for playing Berenice in Member of the Wedding on stage; she is
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story writer: The Shadow on the Hearth. Ami's Nin: The FourChambered Heart. Hortense Powdermaker, anthropologist: Hollywood: The Dream Factory. Anzia Yezierska: Red Ribbon on a White Horse.
1950
later nominated for an Academy Award for the movie version of the same role. Kay Sage, poet and Surrealist painter who often played with architectural forms in her works, exhibits Page 49, an oil on canvas. The 41 percent of black females who are domestic workers still receive no benefits from national worker legislation, such as minimum wage or hour laws, social security, or unemployment compensation. Some 2 5 percent of all black wives and 10 percent all white wives are either separated, divorced, or widowed; for both groups, approximately 40 percent are heads of households including children. African American Chicago lawyer Edith Sampson is appointed an alternate delegate to the United Nations. The gay rights organization the Mattachine Society is founded by a group of gay men in Los Angeles.
Women Writers in the United States * 25*7 TEXTS 1950
CONTEXTS 1950
Republican Senator Margaret Chase Smith, the first woman to be elected to both houses of Congress, is the first and one of few in the Senate to denounce Senator Joseph McCarthy for basing his campaign to rid the nation of communism in "fear, ignorance, bigotry, and smear." During the McCarthy era, women including Marya Mannes, Mary McCarthy, Lillian Hellman, and Diana Trilling speak out against McCarthyism. The George Burns and Grade Allen Show makes a successful transition from radio to television. Mahalia Jackson makes her first appearance at Carnegie Hall. Fifty-seven percent of black women work outside the home, compared with 3 7 percent of white women. Some 42 percent of employed black women work as domestics. During the 1950s, they will receive an average weekly pay of $13. Charlotte Klein, one of the first female public relations executives, is instru-
25*2 4
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1950
1950
mental in launching the "first anthropologically correct Negro Doll" ever mass-marketed in the U.S. Ideal Toy, which creates the doll, establishes a jury including Eleanor Roosevelt to determine the doll's exact shade. The doll is the biggest selling toy in the South during the Christmas shopping season that year.
1950-1953
1950-1953
Korean War.
1951
The first color televisions are available.
1951
Hannah Arcndt (19061975), German-born philosopher and political activist: The Origins of Totalitarianism. Louise Bogan: Criticism: Achievement, in American Poetry, 1900-1950. Kay Boyle: The Smoking Mountain: Stories of Germany During the Occupation. Rachel Carson: The Sea Around Us, winner of the National Book Award for nonfiction in 1952. Lillian Hellman: The Autumn Garden, a play. Marguerite "Maggie" Higgins (1920-1966), foreign correspondent, wins a Pu-
Paula Ackerman, acting on an interim basis after her husband's death, becomes the first woman to fulfill a rabbi's duties. Marion Donovan begins marketing the product she created "out of a shower curtain and absorbent padding": disposable diapers. Lucille Ball (1911-1989), actress and comedienne, with her husband Desi Arnaz, launches the longrunning and extremely popular television show / Love Lucy. Cartoon artist Hilda Terry becomes the first
Women Writers in the United States * 293 TEXTS
1951
litzer Prize for her coverage of the Korean War, becoming the first woman to win a Pulitzer for journalism. Hazel Ai Chun Lin, Chinese American novelist: The Physicians. Helen McCloy becomes the first female president of the Mystery Writers of America. Carson McCullers: The Ballad of the Sad Cafe, a novella and short stories. Catherine Marshall (1914-1983), religious writer: A Man Called Peter, spiritual autobiography, bestseller. Marianne Moore: Collected Poems. In 1952 she receives the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, and the Bollingen Prize for this collection. Shelley Ota, Japanese American writer: Upon Their Shoulders. Adrienne Rich, influential feminist poet and essayist: A Change of World, chosen by W. H. Auden for the Yale Younger Poets Award.
CONTEXTS
1951
woman member of the National Cartoonist Society. Lee Krasner (1908-1985), Abstract Expressionist and avant-garde artist, has her first one-woman show at the Betty Parsons Gallery. She is known for paintings such as Red, White, Blue, Yellow, Black; it combines Cubist structure with explosive color. Earlier in her career she was famous for her "little image paintings," but after the death of her husband Jackson Pollock she moved to larger canvases.
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Jessamyn West: The Witch Diggers, a novel.
1951
1952
Dorothy Day: The Long Loneliness, autobiography.
1952
Patricia Highsmith, writing as Claire Morgan: The Price of Salt, one of the bestselling lesbian novels of all time. Mary McCarthy: The Groves of Academe. Yoko Matsuoka, Japanese American autobiographer: Daughter of the Pacific. Edna St. Vincent Millay: The Collected Poems, published posthumously. Flannery O'Connor: Wise Blood, a novel. Naomi Replansky: Ring Song, a collection of poetry. Han Suyin: A Many Splendored Thing, autobiographical novel. Hilary Waugh: Last Seen Wearing, an early classic of the police procedural genre. Su-ling Wong and Earl Herbert Cressy: Daughter
Helen Erankenthaler develops stain (Color Field) painting, stretching large, unsized canvases on the floor, thinning oil paint to the consistency of water, and pouring and pushing it into patterns. Her first major work in this mode is Mountains and Sea. Abstract Expressionist artist Joan Mitchell has her first solo show. Elizabeth II becomes Queen of England. Some 87 percent of southern black women have never voted. The House of Representatives sanctions an investigation of paperback books, magazines, and comics to assess the extent of "immoral, obscene, or otherwise offensive matter." When playwright Lillian Hellman is called before the House Un-American Activities Committee, she is blacklisted after refusing to "name names."
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1952
of Confucius, autobiography.
CONTEXTS
1952
Hisaye Yamamoto: "Yoneko's Earthquake," chosen as one of the best stories of the year.
Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper invents the computer "compiler," which enables the first automatic programming for computers. She is also responsible for developing COBOL, the first computer language to use English. St. Martin's Press is established. Kitty Wells records the hit "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels," in answer to Hank Thompson's condemnation of women, "The Wild Side of Life." Her song makes her the first woman in country music to have a number one record.
1953
Jane Bowles: In the Summer House, a play. Gwendolyn Brooks: Maud Martha, bildungsroman of African American womanhood. Vera Caspary: Thelma, a novel. Su Hua Ling Chen: Ancient Melodies, autobiography by Chinese American woman.
1953
Ethel Greenglass Rosenberg and her husband Julius are executed in the electric chair at Sing Sing prison for allegedly passing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. The Kinsey Report Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, is published (four years after the publication of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male] to much criticism; it finds that almost 50 percent of
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1953
Dorothy Johnson, Montana novelist, short-story writer, and essayist: Indian Country, a collection of stories. Ann Petry: The Narrows, a novel. Monica Sone, Japanese American autobiographer: Nisei Daughter. Gertrude Stein: Patriarchal Poetry. Jessamyn West: Cress Delehanty, sketches of the life of an adolescent girl.
1953
American women have had premarital sex, 62 percent masturbate, 26 percent have had an extramarital affair, and 20 percent have had at least some homosexual experience. President Eisenhower issues an executive order prohibiting gay men and lesbians from obtaining federal employment. Oveta Gulp Hobby is appointed the first secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. Ann Davidson is the first woman to sail solo across the Atlantic Ocean. Anchor Books, a trade paperback division of Doubleday, is introduced. Hugh Hefner's Playboy magazine is founded. TV Guide magazine is first published. The "Italian" haircut — a carefully casual closely cropped cut—becomes the fashion for women. Clothes designer Goco Ghanel introduces her Chanel Suit; it becomes popular with "working girls" of the '50s.
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1953
1953
297
Tennis player Maureen Connolly™ "Little Mo" — becomes the first U.S. woman to win the "grand slam," taking championship honors in Australia, France, the U.S., and at Wimbledon. Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes President. Soviet military intervention in Germany. Stalin dies.
1954
Harriette Arnow: The Dollmaker, a novel. Doris Betts: The Gentle Insurrection, and Other Stories. Louise Bogan: Collected Poems, 1923-1953. Ellen Glasgow: The Woman Within, posthumously published autobiography in which she reveals a long, secret affair with a married man and claims her best work was done when love was over. Bowen Ingram: Light in the Morning. Frances Gray Patton, North Carolina novelist: Good Morning, Miss Dove.
1954
A nuclear explosion occurs on Bikini Island. The Senate condemns Senator Joseph McCarthy. Brown v. Board of Education ofTopeka finds racial discrimination unconstitutional in schools; the suit is brought on behalf of Linda Brown, a student from Topeka, Kansas. After a history of NAACP work in the South, civil rights activist Ella Baker becomes president of the Manhattan NA\CP; her later involvement with SCLC and SNCC ineludes her delivery of the keynote address in 1964 at the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party convention.
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May Swenson (1919— 1989), poet: Another Animal.
1954
Three out of five households—about 29 million— own television sets.
Eudora Welty: The Ponder Heart, a novel.
Ninety percent of adult Americans drink 3 to 4 cups of coffee a day; 70 percent of men and 58 percent of women drink beer, wine, or liquor.
Maria Yen, Chinese American writer: The Umbrella Garden, nonfiction.
Thirty percent of women and 60 percent of men smoke.
Alice B. Toklas (18771967): The Alice B. Toklas Cook Book.
Actress Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) receives the Best Actress Award for Roman Holiday. She goes on to star in numerous films, including Sabrina, My Fair Lady, and Breakfast at Tiffany's, and to serve as spokesperson for UNICEF. Jane Freilicher, known for her cityscapes that combine realism and abstract expressionism, exhibits Early New York Evening. Disc jockey Alan Freed coins the term "rock 'n' roll" to describe the new music hitting the air waves. The first "TV dinners" are introduced, purportedly to help lighten the
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1954
1954
299
load of working mothers and their "baby boom" children. Dorothy Dandridge (1922-1965) is the first African American woman nominated for an Academy Award for best actress, for her performance in Carmen. Leontyne Price, African American opera singer, makes her concert debut as a soprano at Town Hall in New York.
1955
Eileen Chang, Chinese American novelist: The Rice Sprout Song, a novel. Alice Childress, African American playwright: Trouble in Mind, a play. The first reliable edition of Emily Dickinson's poems is published. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (1890-1964), political activist and feminist: / Speak My Own Piece: Autobiography of "The Rebel Girl. " Isabella Gardner (19151981), poet: Birthdays from the Ocean. Patricia Highsmith: The Talented Mr. Ripley, the
1955
Rosa Parks is arrested after refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger on a Montgomery bus. The outrage and organized protests her treatment stirred lead many to hail her as the "mother of the Civil Rights movement." There are two female senators and 16 congresswomen. Eight women in San Francisco found the Daughters of Bilitis, a group advocating social and civil rights for lesbians. The U.S. joins the Universal Copyright Convention; each member coun-
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first
in a popular mystery series featuring the morally bankrupt Tom Ripley. Cleofas Jaramillo: Romance of a Little Village Girl. Anne Morrow Lindbergh, novelist and autobiographer: Gift from the Sea. Mary McCarthy: A Charmed Life, a novel. Margaret Millar: Beast in View, winner of the Best Novel award from the Mystery Writers of America, Flannery O'Connor: A Good Man Is Hard to Find, and Other Stories. Ann Petry: Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railway.
CONTEXTS 1955
try agrees to treat works by citizens of other countries as it would those of its own citizens. Seventy percent of American Catholics follow Church teachings on birth control. Louise A. Boyd becomes the first woman to fly over and around the North Pole. Frances Gabe begins working on her invention, the self-cleaning house, "equipped with a general Cleaning, Drying, Heating, and Cooling apparatus in each room." Leontyne Price appears in Puccini's Tosca with the NBC Opera; she is the firstblack singer to appear in a televised opera. AFL and CIO merge.
Eudora Welry: The Bride of Innesfallen, collection of stories. Liang Yen, also known as Margaret Briggs: Daughter of the Khans, autobiography by Chinese American woman.
Myra Adele Logan is the firstwoman surgeon to operate on the human heart. Jane Wilson, who began as an Abstract Expressionist, in the mid-1950s turns to "memoryscapes" of the Midwest.
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1956
The Ladder, a lesbian magazine, begins publication. It closes in 1972. Marian Anderson (19021993), the premier contralto of her generation and the first African American woman soloist to perform at the Metropolitan Opera house: My Lord, What a Morning, her autobiography. Elizabeth Bishop: Poems: North & South—A Cold Spring, Pulitzer Prizewinner. Diana Chang, Chinese American novelist: The Frontiers of Love. Eileen Chang, Chinese American novelist: The Naked Earth. Hsin-hai Chang, Chinese American novelist: The Fabulous Concubine. Caroline Gordon: The Malefactors, a novel. Billie Holiday (born Eleanora Fagan, 1915-1959), singer and autobiographer: Lady Sings the Blues. Grace Metalious (19241964): Peyton Place, bestselling novel.
CONTEXTS
1956
Soviet military intervention in Hungary. Grace Kelly (1929-1982), actress known for performances in High Noon and Rear Window, marries Prince Rainier of Monaco. Bette Nesmith starts selling her invention, Liquid Paper, out of her garage.
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1956
Marcia Nardi (born Lillian Massell, 1901-1990), whose letters to William Carlos Williams arc excerpted in his Paterson, publishes Poems.
1956
Helen Waite Papashvily: All the Happy Endings, perhaps the first social and psychological study of popular 19th-century American fiction written by, for, and about women. Mary Lee Settle, southern writer: O Beulab Land, the first in her series of novels about the coalmining region of West Virginia. Jo Sinclair: The Changelings, a novel. Elizabeth Spencer: The Voice at the Back Door, a novel. Han Suyin, Chinese American novelist: And the Rain My Drink.
1957
Ann Bannon, lesbian "pulp" novelist: Odd Girl Out. Catherine Drinker Bowen, biographer: The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke, 1552-1634,
1957
A Civil Rights Bill is passed, the first one since the 1875 bill (which was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1883). Under the leadership of Daisy Bates of the National Association for the
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1957
winner of the National Book Award in 1958.
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Dorothy Johnson: The Hanging Tree, a novel. Jean Kerr, playwright and novelist known for her semi-autobiographical comedies about family life: Please Don't Eat the Daisies.
Advancement of Colored People, protesters help insure the safe integration of nine African American teens ("The Little Rock Nine") into Central High School in Arkansas, Althea Gibson, who broke the color barrier in tennis in 1949, wins consecutive Wimbledon and U.S. Open titles and is the Associated Press poll's "Woman Athlete of the Year" for 1957 and 1958. She later becomes the first black woman to win all the world's singles titles for women.
Mary McCarthy: Memories of a Catholic Girlhood. Ayn Rand: Atlas Shrugged. Kay Sage (1898-1963), poet and Surrealist painter: The More I Wonder.
Harlequin Enterprises begins focusing production on romance fiction. The "Sack," an unfitted dress, comes into fashion. The Soviets launch Sputnik I into outer space.
1957-1975
1958
Hannah Arendt: The Human Condition. Djuna Barnes: The Antiphon, verse drama.
1957-1975
During the Vietnam era, approximately 261,000 women serve in the U.S. Armed Forces, over 7500 in Vietnam itself.
1958
The U.S. launches Explorer I into space, several months after Sputnik.
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1958
Balachandra Rajan, Indian American novelist: The Dark Dancer.
At the urging of retired persons from a variety of professions, 74-year-old Ethel Percy Andrus founds the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). Later this same year she creates Modern Maturity magazine, which by the 1990s has one of the highest circulations of magazines in publication.
Louisa Revell: See Rome and Die.
Atheneum Publishers is formed.
Han Suyin: The Mountain Is Young, novel.
Cheryl Crane, 14-yearold daughter of actress Lana Turner, stabs and kills her mother's boyfriend, Johnny Stompanato. She is later acquitted of the crime.
Janet Lim: Sold for Silver, autobiography by a Chinese American woman.
1958
Hazel Ai Chun Lin: The Moon Vow, novel. Rose Pesotta: Days of Our Lives, autobiography.
May Swenson: A Cage of Spines, poetry.
Fernand Lamaze introduces his method of natural childbirth, which soon becomes popular in the U.S.
1959
Ann Bannon: I Am a Woman and Women in the Shadows. Sylvia Beach (1887-1962), bookseller who first published Joyce's Ulysses in France: Shakespeare 6" Co., memoir of her bookshop.
1959
Joan Baez, musician and social activist, first receives national attention at the Newport Folk Festival. Fidel Castro overthrows the Batista regime in Cuba.
Women Writers in the United States * 305 TEXTS 1959
Diana Chang: A Woman of Thirty, a novel. Katherine Dunham, African American dancer: A Tale of Innocence: Memoirs of Childhood, an autobiography. Lorraine Hansberry (1930-1965): A Raisin in the Sun. The first African American woman to have a play on Broadway, where Raisin runs for 538 performances, and the first African American and youngest American to win the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play of the Year. A film version is made in 1960. Shirley Jackson: The Haunting of Hill House, a novel. Margaret Leech: In the Days ofMcKinley, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for history in 1960, the second such award for Leech. Denise Levertov: With Eyes at the Back of Our Heads, poetry. Janet Lewis: The Ghost of Monsieur Scarron, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1959
With her election to a judgeship in Philadelphia, Juanita Kidd Stout becomes the first African American woman elected judge in the U.S. Ruth Handler, wife of Mattel co-founder, invents the Barbie doll, named after her daughter. She later invents the first breast prosthesis for mastectomy patients.
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Mary Margaret McBride (1899-1976), newspaper and radio journalist: A Long Way from Missouri. Paule Marshall, African American novelist and short-story writer: Brown Girl, Bwwnstones, a novel. Grace Paley, Russian Jewish American short-story writer and poet: The Little Disturbances of Man. Stories of Men and Women at Love. Kate Simon (1912-1990), Polish-born but raised in the Bronx, travel writer and memoirist: New York Places and Pleasures. Ruth Stone, poet: In an Iridescent Time. Lin Tai-yi: The Eavesdropper. Mona Van Duyn, poet: Valentines to the Wide World. Jessamyn West: Love Is Not What You Think and Love, Death, and the Ladies' Drill Team, a collection of short stories. Mae West: Goodness Had Nothing to Do With It, autobiography.
CONTEXTS 1959
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1960
Harriette Arnow: Seedtime on the Cumberland, social history. Ann Bannon: Journey to a Woman, a lesbian novel. Charlotta Spears Bass (1880P-1969), civil rights activist, 40-year editor of the oldest African American newspaper on the West Coast, and autobiographer: Forty Years: Memoirs from the Pages of a Newspaper. Kay Boyle: Generation -without Farewell, a novel. Gwendolyn Brooks: The Bean Eaters, poetry. Vera Caspary: Evvie, a novel of a young woman working in a city in the 1920s. H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) becomes the first woman to receive the Award of Merit Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Margaret Harada, Japanese American novelist: The Sun Shines on the Immigrant.
CONTEXTS 1960s
Manufacturing of infant formulas to supplant breast-feeding begins.
1960
Civil Rights Act passed. Some 45.7 percent of the country's population is urban. Twenty-one percent of the population (39 million people) live at or below poverty level. There are 3 million recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefits. In the labor force, 23,272,000 women constitute 32.3 percent of the total work force and 3 8 percent of all women of working age; 30.5 percent of all working women are married. Some 24.2 percent of college professors are women (down from 31.9 percent in 1930); 36.6 percent of editors and reporters are women (up from 12.2 percent in 1910); 6.9 percent of physicians are women (up from 5 percent in 1920); and 6.9 percent of industrial managers are women (up from 1.7 percent in 1910).
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1960
Lillian Hellman: Toys in the Attic, winner of New York Drama Critics Circle Award and Gold Medal for drama from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Jean Kerr: The Snake Has All the Lines.
Gussie Kimball, Jewish American author: Gitele.
1960
Four-fifths of all whites and three-fifths of all nonwhites use or have used contraception; 93 percent of all college-educated women have done so. Redbook magazine asks its readers "Why Young Mothers Feel Trapped"; over 24,000 women respond. The birth control pill is introduced in the U.S.
Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1961.
John F. Kennedy is elected President.
Virginia Lee, Chinese American novelist: The House That Tai Ming Built.
Abstract Expressionist Grace Hartigan is cited as the most celebrated woman painter in America for her gestural paintings.
Hazel Ai Chun Lin: House of Orchids. Phyllis McGinley (19051978), poet: Times Three: Selected Verse from Three Decades -with Seventy New Poems, winner of 1961 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. Flannery O'Connor: The Violent Bear It Away, a novel. Sylvia Plath (1932-1963): The Colossus and Other Poems.
Patsy Cline (1932-1963), country and crossover singing artist, joins the Grand Ole Opry. Although her career is cut short when she dies in a 1963 plane crash, her music remains extremely popular. By 1992, her Greatest Hits album will be the only album from the 1960s still on the charts. Some 58,900,000 newspapers are circulated daily.
Women Writers in the United States 4 309 TEXTS 1960
Mary Lee Settle: Know Nothing, a novel.
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1960
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) is formed.
1960-1970
The reported rape rate rises 95 percent.
1961
The Peace Corps is established.
Anne Sexton (19281974): To Bedlam and Pan Way Back, poetry. Jo Sinclair: Anna Teller. Elizabeth Spencer: The Light in the Piazza, winner of the McGraw-Hill Fiction Award. Lin Tai-yi: The Lilacs Overgrown, a novel. 1960-1970
1961
Diana Chang: A Passion for Life, a novel. Anita Scott Coleman: Singing Bells. H.D. (Hilda Doolittle): Helen in Egypt, epic poem. Maureen Howard, novelist and memoirist: Not a Word about Nightingales, a novel. Carolyn Kizer, poet: The Ungrateful Garden. Adet Lin: The Milky Way and Other Chinese Folk Tales.
The Berlin Wall is built. "Freedom Rides" begin throughout the South, with both black and white civil rights activists riding buses throughout the segregated South to test the region's commitment to federal law. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, political activist known as "The Rebel Girl of the Industrial Workers of the World [IWW]," becomes the first woman chair of
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Carson McCullers: Clock without Hands, a novel. Paule Marshall: Soul Clap Hands and Sing, a collection of novellas. Tillie Olsen, feminist, social activist, fiction writer, and retriever of many "lost" works by women: "Tell Me a Riddle," novella, winner of O. Henry Award for best short story of the year. Grace Paley, is awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in fiction. Santha Rama Rau: Gifts of Passage: An Autobiography.
1961
the United States Communist Party. President Kennedy forms the President's Commission on the Status of Women, chaired by Eleanor Roosevelt. Bay of Pigs Invasion in Cuba. Kennedy sends troops to Vietnam. Americans send their first man into space less than a month after the Soviets accomplish the first manned space flight. Only 3.6 percent of law students are women. Some 76.1 percent of all high-school-age workers are simultaneously enrolled in school. A Ladies' Home Journal poll of young women 16 to 21 years of age finds that "most" want four kids and "many" want five. At age 18, Billie Jean King becomes the youngest player to win at Wimbledon. She goes on to win 20 Wimbledon titles, a record number.
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1961
1961
Charity Davis (born in 1842), believed to be the longest-living American woman, dies at 119 years and 160 days. Soprano diva Leontyne Price debuts at the Metropolitan Opera singing Leonora in // Trovatore.
1962
Ann Bannon: Beebo Brinker, a lesbian novel. Helen Gurley Brown publishes Sex and the Single Girl. Rachel Carson (19041964), marine biologist and writer: The Silent Spring, awakens people to the dangers of insecticides for the environment. Anna Chennault: A Thousand Springs: The Biography of a Marriage, autobiography by a Chinese American woman. Wilma Dykeman, novelist, biographer, and historian of Appalachia: The Tall Woman, a novel. Joyce Johnson, memoirist and novelist: Come and Join the Dance. Madeleine L'Engle, writer of fantasy for children, au-
1962
An estimated 552,000 Native Americans, including "Eskimos," are living in the U.S. Cuban missile crisis. Manpower Development and Training Act. The U.N. posthumously awards Eleanor Roosevelt its first Human Rights Prize. Dolores Huerta becomes vice president and chief negotiator for the United Farmworkers Union. Attorney Edith Spurlock Sampson becomes the second African American woman elected judge in America. Some 46.5 million viewers watch on all three networks as Jacqueline Kennedy leads a tour of the White House.
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tobiographer: A Wrinkle in Time, winner of the Newbery Prize. Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Dearly Beloved: A Theme and Variations. Andre Norton, sciencefiction author, begins her Witch World series, which continues into the 1990s. Rochelle Owens, playwright: Futz.
1962
Beulah Louise Henry, known as "Lady Edison" for her numerous inventions, receives her 45th patent. Sprinter Wilma Rudolph is the first African American woman awarded the James E. Sullivan memorial trophy as outstanding athlete of the year. The "Twist" becomes a national dance craze. Wigs come into fashion.
Sylvia Plath, in the last year of her life, begins to break out of conventional poetic patterns in ways that will influence many poets to follow. Katherine Anne Porter: Ship of Fools, a novel. Balachandra Rajan: Too Long in the West. Anne Sexton: All My Pretty Ones, poetry. Anna Louise Strong begins publishing her Letter from. China. Han Suyin: Two Loves, two novellas. Barbara Tuchman (1912— 1989), journalist and histo-
Marilyn Monroe (19261962), legendary movie star and "sex symbol," dies from an apparent overdose of sleeping pills.
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rian: The Guns of August, a Pulitzer Prize-winning history of the beginnings of World War I.
1962
1963
Hannah Arendt: On Revolution.
1963
Harriette Arnow: Flowering on the Cumberland, a social history. Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971), noted photojournalist and autobiographer: Portrait of Myself. Diana Chang: The Only Game in Town, a novel. Dorothy Day: Loaves and Fishes. Betty Friedan: The Feminine Mystique. Royalties from this bestseller are used to found the National Organization for Women, for which she serves as president, 1966 to 1970. Elizabeth Hardwick founds the New York Review of Books. Virginia Lee: The House That Tai Ming Built.
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Cicely Tyson is the first African American person to appear regularly in a television series (East Side, West Side). Minimalist sculptor Anne Truitt has her first oneperson show. During the Civil Rights March on Washington, Martin Luther King delivers his "I Have a Dream" speech. Civil rights leader Medgar Evers is murdered in Mississippi. Four young black girls are killed when the church they attend in Birmingham, Alabama, is bombed by white racists. Meta Warrick Fuller sculpts The Crucifixion in memory of the four African American girls killed in the Birmingham church bombing. The Equal Pay Act bans wage discrimination based solely on sex.
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1963
Mary McCarthy: The Group, a novel. Jessica Mitford: The American Way of Death, an expose of the funeral industry. Lucille M. Nixon and Tomoe Tama collect poems by Japanese American housewives, gardeners, maids, farmers, and business people in Sounds from the Unknown. Joyce Carol Gates, prolific novelist, short-story writer, poet, essayist, and playwright, who also writes suspense novels under the name Rosamond Smith: By the North Gate, a collection of short stories. Sylvia Plath: The Bell Jar, a novel published under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas. She commits suicide a few weeks after its publication. Adrienne Rich: Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law, poetry. Gloria Steinem's undercover expose of Hugh Hefner's Playboy empire, "I Was a Playboy Bunny," appears.
1963
Feminist Gloria Steinem goes undercover as a Playboy Bunny in Hugh Hefner's Playboy empire. Homosexuality is considered illegal (and frequently "sick" and "sinful") in every state except Illinois. "Hootenannies," group folk concerts with audience participation, become popular. Mary Ann Fischer becomes the first U.S. woman to give birth to quintuplets. Katherine Dunham becomes the first black choreographer to work with the Metropolitan Opera (on a production of Aida). President John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas; Sarah Tilghman Hughes swears in Lyndon B. Johnson aboard Air Force One following Kennedy's assassination, becoming the first woman federal judge to swear in a President. Artist Elaine de Kooning, known for her still lifes, portraits, and abstracts, is commissioned by
Women Writers in the United States * 315 TEXTS
1963
Han Suyin: The Four Faces, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1963
ex-President Harry S. Truman to paint a portrait of President John F. Kennedy; the project is disrupted when Kennedy is assassinated.
1964
The Economic Opportunity Act (President Johnson's "War on Poverty") leads to projects such as the Job Corps and Neighborhood Youth Corps.
May Swenson: To Mix with Time, poetry. Alice B. Toklas: What Is Remembered, a memoir. Linda Ty-Casper, Filipina American fiction writer: "The Transparent Sun " and Other Stories. Charlotte Zolotow, influential and prolific author of children's literature: The Quarreling Book. 1964
Marion Zimmer Bradley, science-fiction and fantasy writer, begins her Darkover series, which continues into the 1990s. Eleanor Clark: The Oysters of Locmariaquer, combining essay genre with travel book and novel techniques, winner of National Book Award for nonfiction. Louise Fitzhugh: Harriet the Spy, the beginning of a popular children's series with a somewhat controversial (anti)heroine who keeps a journal in which she records brutally frank
The Civil Rights Act is passed; Title VII bans sex discrimination in employment. Martin Luther King, Jr., wins the Nobel Peace Prize. At a meeting of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Stokely Carmichael utters his notorious
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assessments of the adults around her. Shirley Ann Grau, novelist and short-story writer: The Keepers of the House, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Ada Louise Huxtable, an internationally known architecture critic for the New York Times and winner of the first Pulitzer Prize for architecture criticism (1970): Classic New York. Adrienne Kennedy, experimental playwright: Funnyhouse of a Negro. Jane Langton, mystery novelist who illustrates her own works: Transcendental Murder, the first featuring New England sleuth Homer Kelly. Denise Levertov: 0 Taste and See, poetry. Bette Bao Lord, Chinese American novelist and biographer: Eighth Moon, biography. Qoyawayma Polingaysi: No Turning Back, autobiography of life as a Hopi and leader in the education of Native Americans.
1964
remark that the best position for women in the organization is "prone." Freedom Summer: voter registration drive in Mississippi. Fannie Lou Hamer leads the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to the Democratic convention. Lyndon B. Johnson is elected to his first full term as President. Kitty Genovese, a 28year old woman, is beaten to death on a corner in Queens, New York; at least 38 neighbors look on but do nothing. Hattie Elizabeth Alexander, acclaimed for her work in theoretical biology, becomes the first woman president of the American Pediatric Society. Physicist Chien-Shiung Wu becomes the first woman ever to win the prestigious Comstock Prize from the National Academy of Sciences. Jerrie Mock becomes the first woman to fly around the world alone.
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Jane Rule, novelist, shortstory writer, essayist, and critic: Desert of the Heart, a lesbian novel.
CONTEXTS 1964
Lin Tai-yi: Kampoor Street, a novel. Dorothy Uhnak: Policewoman: A Young Woman's Initiation into the Realities of Justice, fictionalized autobiography.
Donyale Luna is featured on the cover of Harper's Bazaar and becomes the first African American cover girl for a mainstream U.S. fashion magazine. The "Watusi" and "Frug" are popular rock 'n' roll dances. California becomes the most populous state. The Sonny and Cher Show begins its ten-year stint; Cher goes on to become an outspoken singer, actress, and celebrity.
1965
Sally Carrighar, naturalist: Wild Heritage. Jean Harlow, actress: Today Is Tonight, posthumously published novel. Diane Johnson, novelist: Fair Game. Pauline Kael, film critic and author: / Lost It at the Movies. Flannery O'Connor: Everything That Rises Must Converge, a posthumous collection of short stories. Sylvia Plath: Ariel, posthumously published poems.
1965
The U.S. Air Force begins bombing North Vietnam. Four nurses serving in Vietnam receive Purple Hearts. Before the U.S. withdraws from the war, eight nurses are killed. President Lyndon Johnson endorses birth control in his State of the Union address. Griswold v. Connecticut is noteworthy for fully overturning legislation that made using birth control or giving out information about its use illegal.
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Katherine Anne Porter: The Collected Stories of Katherine Anne Porter, wins Pulitzer Prize in 1966. May Sarton: Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing, a novel. Han Suyin: The Crippled Tree, autobiography. Marguerite Young: Miss Macintosh, My Darling, an experimental novel in imagistic prose, appears in its entirety. It had been published in sections periodically since 1947.
1965
The Voting Rights Act outlaws voting discrimination. The federal program Project Head Start is established to assist and educate impoverished children. Race riots occur in the Watts section of Los Angeles; throughout the late '60s, riots break out in cities including Chicago, Newark, Detroit, and Washington, D.C. The Moynihan Report, entitled "The Negro Family: The Case for National Action," locates the blame for the poverty and alleged pathology of the black community largely on black single mothers. Black activist Malcolm X is murdered. A study conducted in New York state finds that in the years before abortions are decriminalized, African American and Puerto Rican women represent 80 percent of all deaths from illegal abortions. The Naturalization Act passes, establishing an an-
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CONTEXTS 1965
nual quota of 20,000 immigrants from each country; entry is favored for family reunification, skilled arid professional labor, and refugee resettlement. Toni Morrison begins her publishing career as an editor for a subsidiary of Random House; three years later, she is promoted to Senior Editor and transferred to the New York office where she helps to advance the careers of many novelists—including African American women writers such as Toni Cade Bambara —until she leaves the firm in 1985. A national survey finds that the average American woman across socioeconomic levels spends four hours a day on housework and three and a half hours a day caring for children. Patsy Mink becomes the first Japanese American woman in Congress. Stephanie Kwolek invents and patents "Kevlar," a high-tech material used in epoxy resins and as a reinforcement for laminates and tire treads, for Du Pont chemicals.
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1965
Helen Gurley Brown becomes editor of Cosmopolitan. The Beatles' "Help!" is a popular song. The "Mod" look is in fashion; bell-bottoms are especially popular with the youth of both sexes.
1966
Alice Adams, novelist and short-story writer: Careless Love.
1966
Twenty-eight feminists found the National OrgamV^ation for Women
(NOW). Silveria Baltasar, Filipina American writer: Your House Is My House, nonfiction. Under the pseudonym Amanda Cross, literary critic and feminist scholar Carolyn Heilbrun begins the Kate Pansier series of mystery novels with In the Final Analysis. Wilma Dykeman: The Far Family, a novel about life in Appalachia. Dorothy Gilman: The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax, the first of many mysteries featuring a middle-aged widow as spy/sleuth. Maureen Howard: Bridgeport Bus, a novel.
"Last of the Red Hot Manias" Sophie Tucker dies at age 79. Lawyer and New York state senator Constance Baker Motley becomes the first African American woman to serve as federal judge following her appointment by President Johnson. Stokely Carmichael coins the slogan "black power" for the emerging militant black separatist movement. The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense is founded in Oakland, California.
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1966
Berry Morgan, southern novelist: Pursuit. Anai's Nin begins the publication of The Diary of Anai's Nin, 1931-1966, a record of avant-garde life in Paris and New York. The seventh and last volume appears in 1980. Joyce Carol Dates: Upon the Sweeping Flood, short stories. Cynthia Ozick, Jewish American novelist, poet, and essayist: Trust, a novel. Jane Roberts, fiction writer, poet, medium: Row to Develop Your ESP Power, reissued in 1976 as The Coming of Seth. Mary Lee Settle: All the Brave Promises: Memoirs of Aircraft Woman 2nd Class 2146391. Anne Sexton: Live or Die, Pulitzer Prize-winner for poetry in 1967. Susan Sontag, cultural critic, novelist, and shortstory writer: Against Interpretation, and Other Essays.
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1966
Blanche Knopf, wife and silent partner of publisher Alfred A. Knopf, dies unexpectedly in her sleep; a whole issue of the Borzoi Quarterly is dedicated to her and filled with tributes, telegrams, cables, and letters of sympathy, many from noted writers, editors, and other public figures from around the world. The miniskirt is in fashion, with skirt lengths rising four to seven inches above the knee. Janisjoplin (1943-1970), singer and songwriter, gives her first big concert in San Francisco; she dies four years later of a drug overdose. Carol Burnett becomes one of the country's most popular comediennes, starring in The Carol Burnett Show through 1977.
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Jacqueline Susann (19211974), popular novelist: The Valley of the Dolls, filmed in 1967.
1966
Han Suyin: A Mortal Flower, autobiography. Megan Terry, playwright: Viet Rock: A Folk War Movie, a play written for Off-Broadway theaters, the first rock musical and the first anti-war play about the Vietnam War. Margaret Walker, African American novelist and poet: Jubilee, epic novel. Jessamyn West: A Matter of Time, a novel. Sylvia Wilkinson: Moss on the North Side. Wakako Yamauchi, Japanese American author: "And the Soul Shall Dance."
1967
Eileen Chang: The Rouge of the North, a novel. Nikki Giovanni, African American poet and essayist: Black Feeling, Black Talk. Karen Horney: Feminine Psychology.
1967
The National Organization of Women holds its first national conference in Washington, D.C., and drafts its "Bill of Rights for Women." Florence Beaumont becomes the first woman in the U.S. to protest a
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
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1967
Catherine Marshall: Christy, a religious novel. Marianne Moore: The Complete Poems. Joyce Carol Dates: "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?," acclaimed short story, and A Garden of Earthly Delights, a novel. Rose Schneiderman: All for One. Elizabeth Spencer: No Place for an Angel, a novel. Betty Lee Sung: Mountain of Gold. Han Suyin: China in the Year 2001. Diane Wakoski, poet: The George Washington Poems. Sylvia Wilkinson: A Killing Frost.
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war by immolating herself. Rita Mae Brown helps to form the first Student Homophile League while attending New York University. The National Welfare Rights Organization is founded to educate and agitate on behalf of persons eligible for welfare. Helen Natalie Jackson Claytor becomes the first African American woman national president of the YWCA. The Work Incentive Program is designed to reduce the number of AFDC recipients and requires many women to register for job training and placement services. President Lyndon Johnson appoints a Commission on Obscenity and Pornography; its report in 1970 declares that it could find no harmful effects resulting from viewing obscene materials and recommends repealing legislative restrictions on them for consenting adults (then-President Nixon rejects its findings).
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CONTEXTS 1967
In Loving v. Virginia, the Supreme Court allows interracial marriage and revokes anti-miscegenation laws. "The Boston Strangler," Albert De Salvo, confesses to strangling 13 women and is sentenced to life in prison. Richard Speck is convicted for murdering eight Chicago nurses in 1966. The 100 millionth telephone is installed. British fashion model Twiggy tours the U.S. Cosmetic styles emphasize "natural" looks and faces devoid of color. Approximately 7000 women work as strippers in the U.S. Peggy Fleming wins the Women's World Figure Skating Championships for the second year in a row. The photographs of Diane Nemerov Arbus (1923-1971) are featured at the Museum of Modern Art; she is known for
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1967
1968
Folksinger Joan Baez, publishes her autobiography: Daybreak. Louise Bogan: The Blue Estuaries: Poems 1923-1968. Jane Cooper, poet: The Weather of Six Mornings. Mary Daly: The Church and the Second Sex. Joan Didion, California novelist and nonfiction writer: Slouching Towards Bethlehem, essays.
CONTEXTS
1967
her images of the grotesque and for unusual juxtapositions, and for her pictures of many celebrities, including Mae West, Andy Warhol, Norman Mailer, and Susan Sontag.
1968
The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to discriminate in housing matters on the basis of race, color, religion, or nationality; it is not until 1974, under the Housing and Community Development Act, that this prohibition is extended to cover sex discrimination. Shirley Chisholrn is the first African American woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.
Louise Gliick, poet: Firstborn.
Ex-congresswoman and octogenarian Jeannette Rankin leads 5000 women in a march on Capitol Hill in protest of the Vietnam War.
Chuang Hua, Chinese American novelist: Crossings, experimental novel.
Only 1.6 percent of all law school professors are women.
Diane Johnson: Loving Hands at Home, a novel.
Seneca Falls, New York, site of the first convention on women's rights, becomes the site of the-National Women's Hall of Fame.
Nikki Giovanni: Black Judgment
Ursula K. Le Guin's science fiction Earthsea trilogy begins with A Wizard
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ofEarthsea. The Tombs of Atuan appears in 1971, followed by The Farthest Shore in 1973. Alma Lute (1890-1973), journalist and biographer of many women, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Emma Willard, Mary Baker Eddy: Crusade for Freedom, a study of women's roles in antislavery campaigns. Helen Maclnnes: The Salzburg Connection, a suspense novel. Anne Moody: Coming of Age in Mississippi, a memoir of her experiences as a civil rights activist. Sonia Sanchez, African American poet and scholar: Black Fire, a collection of poetry. Lee Smith: The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed, first novel by the prolific southern novelist and shortstory writer. Han Suyin: Birdless Summer, autobiography. Linda Ty-Casper: The Three-Cornered Sun, a novel.
1968
Ten African American intellectuals and writers respond to William Styron's The Confessions of Nat Turner, setting off a controversy over, among other things, whether white authors could effectively or ethically assume African American voices in their writing. Feminists gain national media attention by protesting the sexism of the Miss America Pageant. Elizabeth Duncan Koontz is the first African American president of the National Education Association (NEA). Jacqueline Kennedy marries Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis. Ruth Eisman-Schier, who helped kidnap an Emory University student, becomes the first woman on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list; she is captured in 1969. Civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. Coretta Scott King leads a silent march of 50,000
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in Memphis after her husband's murder. She is voted Woman of the Year and Most Admired Woman by college students. Tet offensive by North Vietnam. Soviets occupy Czechoslovakia. Robert Kennedy is assassinated. Richard Nixon is elected President. Swimmer Debbie Myer becomes the first female to win three gold medals in the Olympics. Race riots in 168 towns and cities. Jogging emerges as a popular exercise activity. Pantsuits for women come into fashion. Laugh-In is the most popular TV show. Actress Eartha Kitt disrupts Lady Bird Johnson's luncheon at the White House with her protest of the Vietnam War.
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1969
Alta founds Shameless Hussy Press, the first feminist publishing house in the U.S. Elizabeth Bishop: The Complete Poems, winner of the National Book Award. Lucille Clifton, African American poet, memoirist, children's writer: Good Times. Ann Cornelisen, social activist, memoirist, and novelist: Torregreca: Life, Death, Miracles, winner of a special award from the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Emily Hahn, nonfiction writer: Times and Places, a memoir. Lorraine Hansberry: To Be Young, Gifted, and Black, published posthumously. Lillian Ilellman: An Unfinished Woman, memoir, winner of the National Book Award.
1968
Silent screen star Mae Marsh, famous for her role as Little Sister in D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation, dies at age 72.
1969
For the second year in a row, Katharine Hepburn earns the Best Actress Oscar: 1968 for Guess Who's Coming to Dinner and 1969 for The Lion in Winter. The group "Diana Ross and the Supremes" breaks up; Ross goes on to a successful solo career. The first Women's Studies baccalaureate degree program is offered at San Diego State University. New York Radicalesbians is formed. New York City hosts the First Congress to Unite Women. Stonewall riots in New York City mark the beginning of the gay liberation movement and the founding of the Gay Liberation Front (GLF). Clara McBride Hale, known as "Mother," opens the Hale House for babies born to drug-
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Elisabeth Kiibler-Ross: On Death and Dying. Mary Lee, Chinese American poet: Tender Bough. Nancy Howell Lee: The Search for an Abortionist, a memoir.
CONTEXTS
1969
addicted mothers in Harlem. American astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin land on the moon, the first humans to do so.
Ursula K. Le Guin, science fiction and fantasy writer, essayist: The Left Hand of Darkness.
The Woodstock Music and Art Fair, held August 15 to 18 on a farm in upstate New York, draws some 300,000 to 400,000 people.
Isabel Miller: Patience and Sarah.
Penthouse magazine appears.
Kate Millett, scholar and feminist: Sexual Politics, ground-breaking analysis of gender.
Diane Crump becomes the first woman jockey to race at a U.S. parimutuel track; the same year, Barbara Jo Rubin becomes the first winning woman jockey in the U.S. and the first to ride two winners in the same day; also that year the first all-woman jockey field in a horse race occurs in Boston.
Arthenia J. Bates Millican: Seeds Beneath the Snow, a collection of stories. Joyce Carol Gates: them, winner of the National Book Award in 1970. Marge Piercy, novelist and poet: Going Down Fast, a novel. Norma Rosen, Jewish American novelist: Touching Evil. Adela Rogers St. Johns, novelist, journalist, first American woman sports
Sharon Sites Adams becomes the first woman to sail alone across the Pacific Ocean. Actress Sharon Tate and four others are murdered in Los Angeles by members of Charles Manson's cult.
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writer, author of a Depression series on unemployed women: The Honeycomb, autobiography.
1969
Sixty-eight percent of Americans surveyed believe "it is wrong for people to have sexual relations before marriage."
Anne Sexton: Love Poems. Yoko Ono and John Lennon wed.
Jean Stafford, novelist and short-story writer: Collected Stories, winner of Pulitzer Prize in 1970. May Wong, Chinese American poet: A Bad Girl's Book of Animals. 1970s
1970s
Some 24 percent of all Native American women of child-bearing age are sterilized, 35 percent of Puerto Rican women are sterilized; in federally subsidized programs, black women represent 43 percent of those sterilized. The first articles begin appearing in medical journals on the possibilities of in vitro fertilization. Women Against Pornography and Women Against Violence are formed. Women's "consciousnessraising" groups spring up across the nation. Median income for Native American women is $1,697.
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1970
The New York-based Radicalesbians publishes "The Woman-Identified Woman," outlining their belief that patriarchy can only truly be challenged when women identify and relate only with other women. The Redstockings Manifesto appears in Notes from the Second Year: Women's Liberation—Major Writings of the Radical Feminists. The authors claim, "We cannot rely on existing ideologies as they are all products of male supremacist culture." Maya Angelou, African American actress, singer, poet, and autobiographer: / Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, an autobiography of the author's life through her midteens. Hannah Arendt: On Violence. Judy Blume, popular children's author: Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. Rosellen Brown, poet and novelist: Some Deaths in
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Fifty-two million pounds of white bread are consumed annually.
1970
Invasion of Cambodia. Total U.S. population is 203,211,926. Women's employment is 31.2 million, compared with 18.4 million in 1950. Eleven percent (23 million people) are living at or below poverty level. Women's median income is $5,440 compared with men's $9,184. While Anglo-American women earn only about 65 percent of what white men earn, Filipino American women earn 47.5 percent, Japanese American women 43.7 percent, Chinese American women 39.6 percent, and Korean American women 37 percent of white men's wages. Some 57 percent of all Chinese American women workers are employed as seamstresses or in food services, Six years after the passage of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, northern black women's wages
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the Delta, a collection of poems.
1970
equal about 95 percent of white women's.
Mignon G. Eberhart, prolific practitioner of the "Had I But Known" style of gothic mystery, is named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America.
The Voting Rights Act lowers the minimum voting age from 21 to 18.
Mari Tivans: I Am a Black W(mi(in, collection of poetry.
The Association of American Law Schools becomes a front-runner in banning sex discrimination in admission, employment, and placement at affiliated institutions.
Shulamith Firestone: The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution. Nikki Giovanni: Re:Creation, poetry. Gail Godwin, novelist: The Perfectionists. Germaine Greer, journalist and critic: The Female Eunuch, influential feminist study. Ada Louise Huxtable: Will They Ever Finish Bruckner Boulevard?. Momoko Iko, Japanese American playwright and novelist: The Old Man. Frances Kakugawa, Japanese American poet: Sand Grains, poet.
California enacts the Western world's first completely no-fault divorce law.
New York City hosts the first organized political anti-rape action, a "Rape Speak Out" organized by the city's Radical Feminists. Author Rita Mae Brown helps lead the "lavender menace," in which lesbians dressed in lavender spread themselves throughout the crowd at the Second Congress to Unite Women in order to prove that lesbians are a presence that cannot be ignored in, nor feared by, the women's movement. Fifty-eight percent of all married couples use either the pill, the IUD, or steril-
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Denise Levertov: Relearning the Alphabet, poetry. Audre Lorde (19341992), black lesbian feminist poet, essayist, and activist: The First Cities, poetiy. Louise Meriwether, African American novelist and biographer: Daddy Was a Number Runner, a novel. Robin Morgan: Sisterhood Is Powerful. Toni Morrison, African American novelist and critic: The Bluest Eye. Pauli Murray, poet and legal scholar: Dark Testament, and Other Poems. Lorine Niedecker (19031970), poet: My Life by Water, collection of her works. Joyce Carol Oates: The Wheel of Love, a collection of short stories, and Love and Its Derangements, poetry. Grace Paley receives a National Council on the Arts grant and a National Institute of Arts and Letters award for short-story writing.
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ization as methods of birth control. Sixty-eight percent of American Catholics defy Church teachings proscribing birth control. Some 17 percent of white women and 6 percent of black women hold college degrees. Four students at Kent State University are shot. For every 1000 married women, 169 get divorces. Florence Howe founds the Feminist Press. Dancer and choreographer Trisha Brown forms the Trisha Brown Dance Company. Women's Strike for Equality. Elizabeth P. Hoisington and Anna Mae Hays become the first women promoted to the rank of brigadier general in the U.S. Army. Alice Neel (1900-1985), whose work with portraiture in the American realist tradition shows a strong influence from
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Santha Rama Rau: The Adventuress: A Novel. Ninotchka Rosca, Filipina American short-story writer: "Bitter Country" and Other Stories. Jane Rule: This Is Not for You, a novel. Sonia Sanchez: We a BaddDDD People, poetry. May Sarton: Kinds of Love, a novel. Carolyn See: The Rest Is Done with Mirrors, a novel. Mona Van Duyn: To See, to Take, winner of the National Book Award. Alice Walker, African American poet, novelist, essayist, and biographer: The Third Life of Grange Copeland, her first novel. Eudora Welty: Losing Battles, a novel.
1970
Expressionism, exhibits Andy Warhol. Time magazine publishes an article entitled "Women's Lib: A Second Look," publicizing feminist author Kate Millett's bisexuality and casting doubts on feminists' "maturity, morality and sexuality." Essence magazine is first published. The American Book Publishers Council and the American Textbook Publishers Institute merge to become the Association of American Publishers. New York state law permits abortion on demand, provided the woman and her physician consent. On April 22, the first Earth Day is held. Jockey Diane Crump becomes the first woman to ride in the Kentucky Derby. The Mary Tyler Moore Show begins. The longrunning sitcom features "Mary Richards," a single career woman who fights for equal pay and lives a
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full life without marriage. Spin-off shows such as Phyllis and Rhoda also feature women characters. Moore goes on to win acclaim as a dramatic actress.
1971
The Women's Press Collective in Oakland prints Judy Grahn's Edward the Dyke and Other Poems, and Violet Press in New York publishes Fran Winant's
1971
Bella Abzug, women's rights advocate and leader in the fight against sexual harassment, is elected to the House of Representatives.
1971
Looking at Women; these works mark the beginning of a published lesbian poetry tradition in the United States.
1971
Bella Abzug, Shirley Chisholm, Betty Friedan, and Gloria Steinem organize the National Woman's Political Caucus to challenge Democratic and Republican procedures for selecting delegates to their conventions.
Our Bodies, Ourselves is published by Boston Women's Health Book Collective. Daphne Athas: Entering Ephesus, a novel. Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge, Chinese American poet and dramatist: Fish Souls. Joan Didioii: Play It as It Lays, a novel. Katherine Dunn: Truck, a novel. Nikki Giovanni: Gemini: An Extended Autobiographical Statement on My First Twenty-jive Years of Being
Washington state's ban on sexual discrimination, the nation's first, goes into effect. Anne L. Armstrong becomes the first woman to be named national cochair of the Republican Party; the following year, she becomes the first woman to give a keynote speech at a major party's national convention. Margaret Arnstein, public health nurse and nursing
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a Black Poet and Spin a Soft Black Song. Shirley Ann Grau: The Condor Passes, a novel. Momoko Iko: The Gold Watch. Elizabeth Janeway: Man's World, Woman's Place: A Study in Social Mythology. Maxine Kumin, poet, novelist: The Abduction, a novel. G. M. Lee, Chinese American dramatist: One in Sisterhood. Ursula K. Le Guin: The Lathe of Heaven, science fiction. Louise Meriwether: The Freedom Ship of Robert Smalls, a biography. Eve Merriam: Growing Up Female in America: Ten Lives. Bharati Mukherjee, novelist: The 7'iger's Daughter. Cynthia Ozick: The Pagan Rabbi and Other Stories. Ann Petry: Miss Muriel, collection of stories.
1971
educator, becomes the first woman to be awarded the Sedgwick Memorial Medal, the highest honor of the American Public Health Association; in 1965 she becomes the first woman to receive the Rockefeller Public Service Award. Female journalists are allowed to join the National Press Club for the first time; Esther Tufty becomes the first woman member. It is at the Press Club that presidential press conferences are usually held. Lucinda Franks becomes the first woman to receive a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. The average age for onset of menopause is 49. Ms. magazine is launched in Gloria Stcinem's living room in New York City. Women are recruited as Secret Service Agents for the first time. Margery Ann Tabankin becomes the first female president of the National Student Association.
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Anne Sexton: Transformations, poetry.
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Ruth Stone: Topography and Other Poems. Barbara Tuchman: Stihvell and the American Experience in China, 1911-1945, the historian's second Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction.
Aileen Hernandez becomes the first African American woman president of the National Organization for Women (NOW). Jeanne Holm becomes the first woman Air Force general. "Hot pants" are the latest rage.
Marta Vidal: Chicanas Speak Out. Eudora Welty: One Time, One Place: Mississippi in the Depression, a collection of her photographs with text. 1972
The Furies: LesbianFeminist Monthly begins publication. Literatura Chicana: Texto and Contexto. Ms. magazine begins publication. Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal begins publication. Toni Cade Bambara (19391995), African American short-story writer and novelist: Gorilla, My Love, a collection of stories. Doris Betts: The River to Pickle Beach, a novel.
1972
The Women's Equity Action League, a nonprofit national organization founded in 1968 that lobbies for a broad range of feminist issues, opens its office in Washington, D.C. Twelve percent of law school students are women. Shirley Chisholm seeks a presidential nomination on the Democratic party ticket. Joann Pierce and Susan Lynn Roley become the first woman FBI agents.
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1972
Lucille Clifton: Good News about the Earth, poetry. Mary Hallock Foote: A Victorian Gentlewoman in the Far West: The Reminiscences of Mary Hallock Foote, posthumously published autobiography. Gail Godwin: Glass People, a novel. Caroline Gordon: The Glory of Hera, a novel. Jessica Hagedorn, Filipina fiction writer, poet, and dramatist: Chiquita Banana. Willyce Kim, Korean American poet: Eating Artichokes. Maxine Kurnin: Up Country: Poems of New England; collection wins Pulitzer Prize in 1973. Madeleine L'Engle: The Crosswicks Journal: A Circle of Quiet, autobiography about the multiple roles of women; first in a trilogy. Margaret Mead: Blackberry Winter: My Earlier Years. Louise Meriwether: The Heart Man: Dr. Daniel
1972
A burglary at the Watergate Llotel in Washington, D.C., becomes news. Nixon is re-elected, but continued investigations into the scandal surrounding the Watergate crisis culminate in his resignation in 1974, at which time Gerald R. Ford becomes President. After a sensational 20month-long trial for her alleged involvement in a bombing designed to free "black political prisoners," black Communist revolutionary and writer Angela Davis is cleared of all charges. The Education Amendments are ratified, disallowing gender discrimination in schools that receive federal support. The Equal Rights Amendment passes in Congress and is sent to the states for ratification. The Supreme Court decides that a state can require a woman to use her husband's surname on certain documents, including driver's licenses.
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Hale Williams, a biography. Joyce Carol Gates: Marriages and Infidelities, a collection of short stories. Flannery O'Connor: The Complete Stories (posthumous collection), wins the National Book Award. Mary Howell Raugust, the first woman ever hired as a dean at Harvard Medical School, publishes her Why Would a Girl Go into Medicine?, which exposes discrimination against female medical students and patients. Anya Seton: Green Darkness, a novel. Anne Sexton: The Book of Folly, poetry. Alix Kates Shulman, novelist: Memoirs of an ExProm Queen. Elizabeth Spencer: The Snare, a novel. Han Suyin: The Morning Deluge: Mao Tsetung and the Chinese Revolution, 1893-1954; vol. 2, Wind in the Tower, published in 1976.
CONTEXTS 1972
Sally Jane Preisand is the first woman rabbi to be ordained in the U.S. The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare claims that approximately 16,000 women have been sterilized through federal programs that year alone. Within two years, the 1972 figures are revised upward to show that between 100,000 and 200,000 sterilizations have been funded. Some 46,497 forcible rapes are reported; estimates suggest that only one out of ten rapes is ever reported. The first rape crisis center opens in Washington, D.C.; five years later, 150 centers operate nationwide. In St. Paul, Minnesota, the first battered women's shelter opens; six years later, 300 shelters have opened and the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence has been formed. Warner Books is established.
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1972
Margaret Tsuda, Japanese American poet: Cry Love Aloud.
1972
Margaret Walker: How I Wrote Jubilee.
Actress Jane Fonda shocks many patriotic Americans by touring North Vietnam and speaking out against the war. The National Conference of Puerto Rican Women is formed.
Eudora Welty: The Optimist's Daughter, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.
Alene Duerk becomes the first woman Navy rear admiral.
Kathleen E. Woodiwiss: The Flame and the Flower, influential popular romance.
Barbara Jordan, attorney and politician, becomes the first African American woman from the South (Texas) elected to die U.S. House of Representatives. Women newscasters Jane Pauley, Lesley Stahl, and Judy Woodruff make their first appearances on die air. Gelsey Kirkland becomes the principal dancer for the New York City Ballet.
1973
Ai, African American/Japanese American poet: Cruelty. Rita Mae Brown, novelist, poet, humorist, screenwriter, and mystery writer: Ruby fruit Jungle, extremely popular novel about a young woman growing up lesbian.
1973
Annie Leibovitz, photographer, publishes Shooting Stars, a collection of her acclaimed pictures of well-known figures. Judy Chicago begins work on The Dinner Party, which includes sculpture, painting, ceramics, needlework, plastics, and chinapainting. The threedimensional traveling
Women Writers in the United States * 341 TEXTS 1973
Sally Carrighar: Home to the Wilderness, an autobiography of her life as a naturalist. Jinsie K. S. Chun, Chinese American novelist: I Am Heaven, biographical novel. Margaret Craven (19011980), novelist, shortstory writer, and journalist: / Heard the Owl Call My Name, a novel. Mary Daly: Beyond God the Father. Sylvia Maida Dominquez, Chicana dramatist: La Comadre Maria: una comedia. Wilma Dykeman: Return the Innocent Earth, a novel. Barbara Ehrenreich, feminist journalist and social historian: Complaints and Disorders: The Sexual Politics of Sickness. Julia Fields: East of Moonlight, poetry. Nancy Friday: My Secret Garden: Women's Sexual Fantasies. Nikki Giovanni: My House, Ego-Tripping and
CONTEXTS 1973
installation celebrates 39 women from history, legend, and myth. The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts hosts the first major exhibition of the paintings and photographs of Susan Flannah (MacDowell) Eakins (1851-1938). In her own day, Eakins's artist husband, Thomas, received the lion's share of critical attention. Roe v. Wade strikes down all state laws prohibiting abortion on any grounds during the first trimester. Norma McCorvey,"Jane Roe," delivers her baby and gives it up for adoption before the case even goes to court. The Comprehensive Employment and Training Act program provides funds for services and training for displaced homemakers. Sex-segregated helpwanted ads are outlawed by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court rules in Frontiero v. Richardson that military women cannot be discriminated against in family benefits but does not enforce anti-
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Other Poems for Young People. Vivian Gornick, feminist and memoirist, longtime writer for Village Voice: In Search of All Mahmoud: An American Woman in Egypt. Shirley Ann Grau: The Wind Shifting West, short stories. Lillian Hellman: Pentimento: A Book of Portraits. Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, Japanese American autobiographer: Farewell to Manzanar. Erica Jong, novelist and poet: Fear of Plying, a novel. Pauline Kael, movie critic: Deeper into Movies, winner of National Book Award in 1974. Mary Lee: The Guest of Tyn-y-Coed Cae: Poems and Drawings. Denise Levertov: The Poet in the World, essays. Audre Lorde: From a Land Where Other People Live, poetry.
CONTEXTS 1973
sex-discrimination policies commensurate to those already in place for race. American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) is ordered to pay $ 15 million in back pay to its female employees because of discriminatory salary practices. The Vietnam cease-fire agreement is reached. Female office workers across the country organize, forming groups like Boston's 9 to 5, New York's Women Office Workers, arid Chicago's Women Employed, The Women's Caucus, founded by Betsy Wade, Joan Cook, and Grace Glueck, protests genderbased salary inequities at their employer, the New York Times. When their efforts prove fruitless, they hire civil rights lawyer Harriet Rabb to represent all 550 women employed at the paper. Boylan v. Times, settled out of court in 1978, results not only in a small cash settlement for each of the women but the establishment of an affirmative action plan at the paper.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1973
Joyce Maynard: Looking Back: A Chronicle of Growing Up Old in the Sixties. Louise Meriwether: Don V Ride the Bus on Monday: The Rosa Parks Story, a biography. Nicholasa Mohr: Nilda, semi-autobiographical story of a Puerto Rican girl growing up in the Bronx, illustrated by the author. Nilda is named the New York Times Outstanding Book of the Year. Toni Morrison: Sula, a novel. Joyce Carol Gates: Do With Me What You Will, a novel, and three volumes of poetry—Angel Fire, A Posthumous Sketch, and Dreaming America and Other Poems. Francine Prose, novelist: Judah the Pious.
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The Government Printing Office approves "Ms." as an acceptable title for women. Lelia Kasensia Smith Foley becomes the first black female mayor in the U.S. (in Taft, Oklahoma). Marian Wright Edelman founds the Children's Defense Fund; Edelman was the first black woman admitted to the Mississippi Bar. The National Black Feminist Organization is formed. Los Angeles hosts the First National Lesbian Feminist Conference. Women make up 44.7 percent of the nation's work force. The Feminist Federal Credit Union is formed in Detroit.
Adrienne Rich: Diving into the Wreck, winner of the National Book Award in 1974.
The U.S. coal industry hires the first woman miner.
Wendy Rose, Native American woman of Hopi tribe: Hopi Roadrunner Dancing.
The National Organization for Non-Parenthood is formed to combat pervasive pronatalism.
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Rose Marie Royball, Chicana poet: From La Llorona to Envidia . . . A Few Reflections. Sonia Sanchez: A Blues Book for Blue Black Magical Women, poetry. Alice Sheldon, writing as James Tiptree, Jr., publishes her influential science-fiction story, "The Women Men Don't See." Jacqueline Susann: Once Is Not Enough, a novel. Alice B. Toklas: Staying on Alone, a collection of letters written after Gertrude Stein's death.
CONTEXTS
1973
The abortion rights group Catholics for a Free Choice is formed. Terry Williams becomes the first woman offered an athletic scholarship (at the University of Miami at Coral Gables). Forty-eight percent of Americans say "it is wrong for people to have sexual relations before marriage." Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics (COYOTE), the first organized group of female prostitutes, is formed. Advertising Age claims it costs Americans more to eat at home than to eat out; one in three meals are eaten outside the home. Billie Jean King defeats "male chauvinist pig" Bobby Riggs in a celebrated tennis match. Bonnie Tiburi is hired as the first female pilot to fly for a major airline. In an episode of the sitcom All in the Family, menstruation is discussed for the first time on television.
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1974
WomanSpirit magazine, one of the first magazines devoted to women's spirituality and the Goddess, is first published. Kathy Acker, postmodernist novelist: I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac. Alice Adams: Families and Survivors, a novel. Jane Chambers, possibly the first self-identified lesbian to be out in mainstream theater: A Late Snow. Diana Chang: Eye to Eye, a novel. Lucille Clifton: An Ordinary Woman, poetry. Elizabeth Colson, anthropologist: Autobiographies of Three Porno Women, from stories she gathered in the 1930s and 1940s. Annie Dillard, essayist, poet, and naturalist: Tickets for a Prayer Wheel.
CONTEXTS
1973
Revlon introduces its "Charlie" perfume with an ad campaign that features women assuming traditionally "male" roles and attitudes.
1974
The Census Bureau classifies 19,440,000 families as poor; 10,877,000 are male-headed and 8,563,000 are femaleheaded. Janet Gray Hayes becomes the first woman to be elected mayor of a major U.S. city (San Jose, California). Ellen Burstyn wins the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the consciousness-raising classic Alice Doesn 't Live Here Anymore. Democratic candidate Ella Grasso wins by a landslide in the gubernatorial election in Connecticut, becoming the first woman ever elected governor who did not follow her husband into office. Elaine Noble, Massachusetts state legislator, becomes the first "out" lesbian to win state office.
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1974
Gloria Flores, Chicana poet: And Her Children Lived.
1974
The minimum wage is extended to domestic workers.
Gail Godwin: The Odd Woman, a novel.
Equal Credit Opportunities Act.
Sylvia Alicia Gonzales, Chicana poet: La Chicana Piensa.
President Gerald Ford signs legislation allowing girls to play Little League baseball.
Marilyn I lacker, poet: Presentation Piece, winner of the National Book Award. June Jordan, African American poet, novelist, essayist: New Day: Poems of Exile and Return. Edith Summers Kelley: The Devil's Hand, a female bildungsroman published posthumously, almost 50 years after its composition. Toni Kosover: The Diary of a Ne~w York Career Girl. Ursula K. Le Guin: The Dispossessed, science fiction. Madeleine L'Engle: The Summer of the GreatGrandmother, the second in an autobiographical trilogy.
The American Psychiatric Association removes homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. The Lesbian Herstory Archives is founded in New York. Black lesbian feminists in Boston form the Combahee River Collective. The Passport Office begins accepting the use of a married woman's birth name. The U.S. Merchant Marine Academy becomes the first service academy to admit women. Nuclear fuel facility laboratory technician Karen Silkwood, 28, dies in an automobile crash near Oklahoma City on her way to meet with a New York Times reporter and a
Women Writers in the United States * 347 TEXTS
1974
Alison Lurie: The War between the Tates, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1974
Kate Millett: Flying, an autobiographical novel.
union official. She had planned to document her allegations that KerrMcGee Nuclear Corporation had falsified quality control reports and that 40 pounds of highly dangerous plutonium were missing from the plant.
Berry Morgan: The Mystic Adventures ofRoxie Stoner.
The Coalition of Labor Union Women is formed.
Tillie Olsen: Yonnondio: From the Thirties.
The Mexican American Women's National Association is founded.
Josephine Miles: To All Appearances: New and Selected Poems.
Grace Paley: Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, collection of stories.
Barbara Ann Allen Rainey becomes the first woman naval aviator.
Rosemary Rogers, popular romance novelist: Sweet Savage Love.
Hustler magazine begins publication.
May Sarton: Collected Poems.
People magazine is first published.
Susan Fromberg Schaeffer: Anya, a novel, and Granite Lady, a collection of poetry.
As a result of the "Tidal Basin Affair," in which Congressman Wilbur Mills is caught with stripper Fannie Foxe, Mill's political career ends and Foxe's show business career effectively begins.
Anne Sexton: The Death Notebooks, poetry. She commits suicide this same year. Ann Allen Shockley: Loving Her, a novel.
Fifteen billion frankfurters are eaten by Americans.
Leslie Marmon Silko, Native American poet and
Americans buy 107 billion bottles of soft drinks.
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1974
novelist: Laguna Woman, poetry.
1974
Jessamyn West: The Secret Look, poetry. Kathleen E. Woodiwiss: The Wolf and the Dove, romance novel.
1975
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society is first published. Gothic thrillers published in various magazines by Louisa May Alcott under the pseudonym A. M. Barnard are collected and published as Behind a Mask: The Unknown Thrillers of Louisa May Alcott. Lisa AJther: Kinflicks, a novel. Susan Brownmillcr: Against Our Will, a study of rape. Ana Castillo, Chicana poet and novelist: Otro Canto. Yuan-lin Chi, Chinese American novelist: A Shadow of Spring. Judy Chicago, multimedia artist: Thru the Flower: My Struggle as a Woman Artist.
1975
U.N. International Women's Year conference is held in Mexico City with 6300 women attending; it leads to the pronouncement of the U.N. Decade for Women. There are 11.4 million recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefits. The 109,377,000 women in the U.S. outnumber men (103,760,000), in part due to longer female life expectancy. In Taylor v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court outlaws automatic exclusion of women from jury duty. Carla Hills becomes the first woman secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Milicent Fenwick of New Jersey is the first known
Women Writers in the United States * 349 TEXTS
1975
Laurie Colwin (19441992), novelist and shortstory writer: Shine on, Bright and Dangerous Object, a novel. Margarita Cota-Cardenas, Chicana poet and novelist: Noches despertando inconciencias. Annie Dillard: Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, which wins the Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction. Nikki Giovanni: The Women and the Men, poetry. Jessica Hagedorn: Dangerous Music: Poetry and Prose. Joy Harjo, Creek poet: The Last Song. Maureen Howard: Before My Time, a novel. Angela de Hoyos, Chicana poet: Arise Chicano and Chicano Poems for the Barrio. Gayl Jones, African American novelist and poet: Corregidora, a novel. Carol Lem, Chinese American poet: Grassroots.
CONTEXTS
1975
grandmother elected to Congress. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis joins Viking Press as a consulting editor; she stays for two years, then resigns and joins Doubleday. Country music and movie star Dolly Parton, known for writing and singing songs about women's lives, pays Porter Wagoner a million dollars in order to leave his show and gain control over her career. She goes on to build a multimillion-dollar entertainment industry. Pregnant women are no longer automatically discharged from the armed services. Military academies are required by Congress to admit women. The U.S. Civil Service Commission removes its ban on the employment of gays and lesbians. The First Women's Bank opens in New York City. Business Week publishes a special issue on "The Corporate Woman."
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1975
Bobbie Ann Mason, Southern novelist, shortstory writer, and critic: The Girl Sleuth: A Feminist Guide to the Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, and Their Sisters. Ella May Miller: The Joy of Housekeeping. Nicholasa Mohr: El Bronx Remembered: A Novel and Stories. Dorinda Moreno, Chicana poet: La Mujer es la tierra: la tierra de vida, poetry and sketches. Bharati Mukherjee: Wife, a novel. Berta Ornelas, Chicana novelist: Come Down from the Mound. Linda Pastan, poet: Aspects of Eve. Sylvia Plath: Letters Home: Correspondence, 19501963, posthumously published. Estela Portillo Trambley, Chicana fiction writer and playwright: Rain of Scorpions, short stories. Judith Rossner: Looking for Mr. Goodbar, a novel.
1975
Tish Sommers founds the Displaced Homemakers League; in 1980 she founds the Older Women's League. In a much-discussed controversial case, JoAnne Little, an African American, is acquitted of the murder of the guard who raped her in her North Carolina jail cell. The Roman Catholic Church canonizes Elizabeth Bayley Seton, the first woman born in the U.S. (in 1774) to be deemed a saint. In 1809, she founded the first U.S. Catholic order, the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph. Women sports reporters first enter men's locker rooms. Saturday Night Live premieres on NBC; comic Gilda Radner becomes immediately popular with characters such as clumsy Lisa Loopner, confused Roseannc Roseannadana, and reporter Baba Wawa. 1800 women attend the first women's spirituality conference in Boston.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1975
Gayle Rubin: "The Traffic in Women: Notes on the Public Economy of Sex" appears in Towards an Anthropology of Women, Rayna Rapp, ed.
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Ruth Siems develops Stove Top Stuffing- for General Eoods.
1976
United Nations Decade for Women begins.
Joanna Russ, novelist and short-story writer, especially of science fiction: The Female Man. Anne Sexton: The Awful Rowing Toward God, poetry, published posthumously. Eileen Simpson: The Maze, a novel. Marcela Trujillo Gaitan, Chicana poet: Chicano Themes: Manila Poetry. Wendy Wasserstein, playwright: Uncommon Women and Others. Betty Siao-meng Waungling, Chinese American novelist: Days of Joy, memoir. Jade Snow Wong: No Chinese Stranger, Chinese American autobiography.
1976
Ann Beattie: Chilly Scenes of Winter, a novel. Martha Boesing, playwright: Love Song for an
The first women are admitted to the U.S.
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1976
Amazon, a one-act play that presents a ceremony celebrating women's friendships. Erma Bombeck, humorist, with a newspaper column syndicated since 1965: The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank. Miriam BornsteinSamoza, Chicana poet: Bajo Cubierta. Rosellen Brown: The Autobiography of My Mother. Lucille Clifton: Generations, a memoir. Ann Cornelisen: Women of the Shadows, nonfiction. Janice Delaney, Mary Jane Lupton, and Emily Toth: The Curse: A Cultural History of Menstruation. Julia Fields: A Summoning a Shining, a collection of poetry. Carolyn Forche: Gathering the Tribes, winner of the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. Gail Godwin: Dream Children, a collection of stories.
1976
Military Academy in West Point, New York. Twenty-seven percent of white and 45 percent of black sexually active unmarried girls are pregnant before they turn 18. By this year, 24 percent of all Native American women have been sterilized. Pauli Murray becomes the first African American woman to be ordained as an Episcopal priest. Award-winning novelist Toni Morrison begins teaching classes in black literature and creative writing at Yale University and Bard College before eventually taking a position at Princeton University. Of physicians practicing in the U.S., 8.6 percent are women. The National Alliance of Black Feminists is founded. The Organization of Pan Asian American Women is formed. Barbara Walters becomes the first woman co-anchor
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CONTEXTS
Lillian Hellman: Scoundrel Time. Lori Higa, Japanese American dramatist: Calamity Jane Meets Suchi Mama
and the BVD Kid; or,
...
Lady Murasaki Rides the Wild Wild West. Shere Hite, cultural historian, publishes the first Hite Report: A Nationwide Study of Female Sexuality. Gayl Jones: Eva's Man, a novel. Frances Kakugawa: Golden Spike and Path of Butterflies, books of poetry. Maxine Hong Kingston, Chinese American writer: The Woman Warrior, winner of National Book Critics' Circle Award for nonfiction. Denise Levertov: Collected Poems, 1960-1974. Hazel Ai Chun Lin: Rachel Weeping for Her Children Uncomforted. Joyce Carol Oates: Childwold, a novel. Cynthia Ozick: Bloodshed Three Novellas.
1976
of a daily evening news program. Singer Anita Bryant leads the "Save Our Children" campaign in Florida, which ends with voters rejecting gay rights; Bryant later recants her strict anti-gay position. News analyst and correspondent Pauline Frederick becomes the first woman to moderate a presidential debate, which she does for Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. Barbara Jordan becomes the first African American keynote speaker for a major party's national political convention, delivering a commanding address before fellow Democrats. Jimmy Carter is elected President. The first Michigan Womyn's Music Festival is held. Janet Guthrie becomes the first woman driver in the Indianapolis 500. Marilyn Levine, ceramic sculptor known for her work in the trompe I'oeil tradition, specializes in imitating objects made of
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1976
Marge Piercy: Woman on the Edge of Time, a novel. Anne Rice, novelist who also writes erotica under the pen names "A. N. Roquelaire" and "Anne Rampling": Interview -with the Vampire, first in the extremely popular Vampire Chronicles, Adrienne Rich: Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Institution and Experience, essays, winner of the National Book Award. Isabella Rios, Chicana novelist: Victuum,. Ntozake Shange, poet, playwright, novelist, and performance artist: for colored girls who have considered suicide when the rainbow is enuf, a choreopoem; and Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo, a novel. Gail Sheehy: Passages: Predictable Crises of Adult Life. Irian Suyin: Wind in the Tower: Mao Tse-tung and the Chinese Revolution, 1954-1915, biography. Alice \Valker: Meridian, a novel.
1976
leather, exemplified by her piece Rick and Margaret's Suitcase, created this year. Charlie's Angels first airs on network television. Singer, actress, director Barbra Streisand becomes the first Oscar-winning actress also to win an Oscar for Best Song with "Evergreen" from the film A Star Is Born. African American artist and educator Alma Thomas receives the International Women's Year Award for Outstanding Contributions and Dedication to Women and Art.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1976
Mitsuye Yamada, Japanese American poet: Camp Notes and Other Poems.
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Bernice Zamora: Restless Serpents, poetry by a Chicana author.
1976-1984
1977
The influence of the Women's Movement and the development of Women's Studies programs leads feminist scholars to begin the work of recovering "lost" women authors and analyzing the role of gender in literature by women and men, as well as studying how gender dynamics influenced the writing of literary history. In this year, Ann Douglas publishes the influential The Feminization of American Culture. It is followed in 1978 by Nina Baym's Woman's Fiction: A Guide to Novels by and about Women in America, 1820-1870 and Judith Fetterley's The Resisting Reader: A Feminist Approach to American Fiction, and, in 1979, by Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-
1976-1984
Sex-related murders rise 160 percent.
1977
Bette Davis becomes the first woman to receive the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award. Compared with only 13 percent in 1952, 72 percent of southern black women have voted in an election. Hyde Amendment prohibits Medicaid-funded abortions. Of AFDC recipients, 52.6 percent are white, 43 percent are black, and the rest are "American Indian and other." The National Women's Studies Association (NWSA) is founded. The First National Women's Conference is held in Houston, Texas.
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TEXTS 1977
Century Literary Imagination. Meena Alexander, Indian American poet, novelist, playwright, and scholar: / Root My Name and Without Place, poetry, and In the Middle Earth, a oneact play.
1977
Azie Taylor Morton becomes the nation's first African American woman treasurer. In this, the first year women are allowed to earn Rhodes scholarships, 24 of the 77 recipients are women.
Toni Cade Bambara: The Sea Birds Are Still Alive, stories.
The Women's Caucus of the National Gay Task Force is established.
Peg Bracken: / Hate to Housekeep Book.
Economist Juanita Morris Kreps, a Carter appointee, becomes the first woman Secretary of Commerce; five years earlier, she was chosen the first woman governor of the New York Stock Exchange,
Olga Broumas: Beginning with 0, a book of poetry selected for the Yale Younger Poets Series. Mary Higgins Clark, popular author of thrillers: A Stranger Is Watching. Wanda Coleman, African American poet: Poems. Margaret Craven: Walk Gently This Good Earth. Joan Didion: A Book of Common Prayer, a novel. Annie Dillard: Holy the Firm, essays in nature and philosophy. Dorothy Dinnerstein: The Mermaid and the Mino-
Carter-appointee Patricia Roberts Harris becomes the first African American female officially to serve on a president's cabinet when she becomes Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; later, she becomes Secretary of Health and Human Services. Eleanor Holmes Norton becomes the first female chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and authors federal guidelines
Women Writers in the United States * 351 TEXTS
1977
taur: Sexual Arrangements and Human Malaise, a feminist analysis of the objectification of the female body through history. Marilyn French, feminist novelist: The Women's Room. Nancy Friday: My Mother/My Self: The Daughter's Search for Identity. Shirley Ann Grau: Evidence of Love, a novel. Beverly Lowry, novelist: Come Back, Lolly Ray. Kate Millett: Sita, autobiographical novel. Nicholasa Mohr: In Nueva York, short stories. Toni Morrison: Song of Solomon, wins National Book Critics' Circle Award and National Book Award. Bharati Mukherjee: Days and Nights in Calcutta, memoir. Marcia Muller introduces Sharon McCone, a female private detective, in Edwin of the Iron Shoes. She will go on to inspire the flood
CONTEXTS 1977
on sexual harassment in the workplace. Virginia Dill McCarty is nominated as the first female U.S. Attorney. Women employees begin a three-year strike for fair wages from a Minnesota bank; the group comes to be called the "Willmar 8." A Wisconsin judge is recalled for the first time in the state's history after giving a lenient sentence to the teenaged rapist of a 16-year-old girl; in announcing his sentence, the judge claimed the rape to be a normal response to "sexual permissiveness and provocative clothing." The Army reinstates the Medal of Honor to Civil War surgeon Dr. Mary Edwards Walker. It had been revoked sixty years earlier for "insufficient evidence of gallantry." Rosalyn Yalow wins the Nobel Prize in Medicine for developing the process of radioimmunoassay. Some 36 million women use tranquilizers; 16 million take sleeping pills,
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TEXTS
1977
of female detective novels that creates a new "Golden Age" of the mystery novel in the 1980s and 1990s. Ana'is Nin: The Delta of Venus, a book of erotica originally written in the 1940s. Francine Prose: Marie Laveau, a novel. Marina Rivera, Chicana poet: Sobra and Mestiza. Wendy Rose: Academic Squaw: Reports to the World from the Ivory Tower. Patsy Sumie Saiki, Japanese American autobiographer: Sachi: A Daughter of Hawaii. Anne Sexton: A SelfPortrait in Letters, edited by Linda Gray Sexton and Lois Ames. Leslie Marmon Silko: Ceremony, a novel. Susan Sontag: On Photography, winner of National Book Critics' Circle Award. Han Suyin: Llasa, the Open City: A Journey to Tibet, nonfiction.
1977
and 12 million take amphetamines. Between 1977 and 1980, Valium is the most prescribed drug in the country. John T. Molloy publishes The Woman's Dress for Success Book. Former Peace Corps volunteer Ann Moore patents the "Snugli," fashioned after the fabric harnesses the Togolese use to carry their children.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1977
Ines Hernandez Tovar, Chicana poet: Con Razon, Corazon: Poetry.
359
CONTEXTS
1977
Dorothy Uhnak: The Investigation, a mystery novel. Alma Luz Villanueva, Chicana poet: Bloodroot and Poems: Third Cbicano Literary Prize. Sylvia Wilkinson: Shadow of the Mountain. Nellie Wong, Chinese American poet: Dreams in Harrison Railroad Park.
1978
Our Right to Love, edited by Ginny Vida, is the first anthology of lesbian essays published by a mainstream press (PrenticeHall). Kathy Acker: Kathy Goes to Haiti, a novel. Marilou Awiakta, Cherokee poet from Appalachia: Abiding Appalachia: Where Mountain and Atom Meet. Judy Blume: Wifey: an Adult Novel. E. M. Broner: A Weave of Women, lyric novel by a Jewish American author.
1978
Two important laws concerning Native Americans are passed: the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the Indian Child Welfare Act, the latter an attempt to halt the practice of fracturing families by placing children in foster homes or up for adoption. Women of All Red Nations (WARN) holds its founding conference, representing women from over thirty Native nations. They call for the decolonization of all Indian peoples and identify sterilization abuses, political prisoners, the restoration of an Indian land base,
360 $ Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1978
Rosellen Brown: Tender Merries, a novel. Diana Chang: A Perfect Love. Suzy McKee Charnas, science-fiction writer: Mother lines. Nancy Chodorow, feminist psychologist: The Reproduction of Mothering. Laurie Colwin: Happy All the Time. Mary Daly, radical feminist philosopher and theologian: Gyn/Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism. Toi Derricotte, poet: The Empress of the Death House. Harriet Doerr: Stones for Ibarra, a novel. Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English: For Her Own Good: 150 Years of the Experts' Advice to Women. Phyllis Eisenstein, author of science-fiction and fantasy short stories and novels: Born to Exile, winner of the Balrog Award.
1978
education, and the survival of the family as target issues. In Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, the Supreme Court finds that the federal government has no right to interfere in intratribal affairs, even when women's rights are at issue. An anti-gay ordinance (the Briggs initiative) is defeated in California through the organization and efforts of gay activists. San Francisco's mayor, George Moscone, and openly gay city supervisor Harvey Milk are assassinated. For the first time all seven sister colleges —Barnard, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Vassar, and Wellesley—have female presidents. Toxic Shock Syndrome is identified and named and, in 1980, connected to tampon use. Between 1979 and 1985, 2814 cases, resulting in 122 deaths, are reported.
Women Writers in the United States * 361 TEXTS
1978
Nikki Giovanni: Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day, poetry. Mary Gordon: Final Payments, winner of the Kafka Prize. Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey: A Woman of Independent Means, a novel. Patricia Hampl, poet and memoirist: Woman Before an Aquarium, poetry. Barbara Grizzuti Harrison: Visions of Glory: A History and a Memory of Jehovah's Witnesses. Beth Henley: Crimes of the Heart, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1981. Maureen Howard: Facts of Life, a memoir. Dorothy B. Hughes, one of the first women to write mysteries in the hard-boiled tradition, is named a Grand Master by the Mysteiy Writers of America. Kristin Hunter, African American novelist: The Lakestoivn Rebellion.
CONTEXTS 1978
Faye Wattleton is the first black president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Phyllis Grann becomes publisher (later president) of G. P. Putnam's Sons; Grann is the first woman to hold the post of publisher of any major publishing house in modern times. The term "feminization of poverty" is coined by sociologist Diana Pearce. The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence is founded. The first "Take Back the Night" march is held, in San Francisco. A Chicago-based study finds that black women are 18 times more likely to be raped than white women. Harriet Tubman becomes the first African American woman to appear on a postage stamp. U.S. District Court finds that female sportswriters cannot be prevented from entering major league baseball locker rooms.
362 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1978
Patricia Ikeda, Japanese American poet: House of Wood, House of Salt. Joyce Johnson: Bad Connections, a novel. Judith Krantz, best-selling romance novelist and the highest paid author of the early 1980s: Scruples. As have many of her works, Scruples has been made into a television miniseries. Meridel LeSueur: The Girl, a chronicle of women's lives written in 1939. Beverly Lowry: Emma Blue. Janice Mirikitani: Awake in the River, poetry by Japanese American woman. Tillie Olsen: Silences, essays. Linda Pastan: The Five Stages of Grief, poetry. Juanita Ponce-Montoya, Chicana poet: Grief Work. Adrienne Rich's influential essay "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence" first ap-
CONTEXTS 1978
Women Writers in the United States * 363 TEXTS 1978
pears in Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society. Muriel Rukeyser: Collected Poems. Joanna Russ: The Two of Them, science-fiction novel. Mary Lee Settle: Blood Tie, winner of a National Book Award. Alice Sheldon, writing as James Tiptree, Jr.: Up the Walls of the World, science fiction. Alix Kates Shulman: Burning Questions, a novel. Susan Sontag: Illness as Metaphor. May Swenson: New and Selected Things Taking Place, poetry. Eleanor Wong Telemaque, Chinese American novelist: It's Crazy to Stay Chinese in Minnesota. Evangelina Vigil, Chicana poet: Nade y nade. Michele Wallace: Black Macho and the Myth of the Supenuoman.
CONTEXTS 1978
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1978
Eudora Welty: The Eye of the Story, essays.
1978
May Wong, Chinese American poet: Superstitions: Poems.
1979
Barbara Taylor Bradford: A Woman of Substance, a popular novel. Kate Braverman: Lithium, for Medea, a novel. Barbara Brinson-Pineda, Chicana poet: Noctorno. Octavia E. Butler, African American writer of science fiction: Kindred. Vera Caspary: The Secrets of Grown-ups, autobiography. Fay Chiang, Chinese American poet: In the City of Contradictions. Judy Chicago: The Dinner Party: A Symbol of Our Heritage, a volume describing the creation, history, and people involved in her multi-media exhibit, The Dinner Party. Kiana Davenport, Hawaiian novelist and shortstory writer: A Desperate Season.
1979
Nuclear accident at Three Mile Island. Jane Byrne is elected Chicago's first woman mayor. The Reverend Jerry Falwell establishes the "Moral Majority." Beverly LaHaye founds Concerned Women of America, a conservative woman's organization; by 1995 membership is estimated at 600,000. For the first time, more women than men enter college in the U.S. The National Archives for Black Women's History opens in Washington. Historian and author Barbara Tuchman becomes the first woman elected president of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. U.S. Treasury issues the Susan B. Anthony dollar, making Anthony the first woman to appear on a
Women Writers in the United States * 365 TEXTS
1979
Joan Didion: The White Album, essays. Phyllis Eisenstein: Sorcerer's Son. Sally Miller Gearhart, science-fiction writer: The Wanderground. Gail Godwin: A Mother and Two Daughters, a novel. Anne Halley, poet and fiction writer: The Bearded Mother, poetiy. Elizabeth Hardwick: Sleepless Nights, a novel. Alice Hoffman: The Drowning Season, a novel. Angela de Hoyos: Selected Poems. Clara Kubojiri, Japanese American dramatist: Country Pie, Talk Story. Mary Wong Lee, Chinese American poet: Through My Windows; Book II published 1980. Denise Levertov: Collected Earlier Poems, 1940-1960. Ruthanne Lum McCunn: An Illustrated History of the Chinese in America.
CONTEXTS
1979
U.S. coin; it stops minting the coin two years later. Bette Midler, known for her raunchy humor and raucous stage personality, appears in The Rose, a film biography of rock singer Janis Joplin, and opens on Broadway in Bette! Divine Madness. A Navajo Times story contends that rape is the crime occurring most frequently on the Navajo Reservation. The National Weather Service stops naming all storms for women and begins giving half of them men's names. In a much-publicized case, Greta Rideout charges her husband John with marital rape; when he is acquitted, the couple attempts a reconciliation. However, after the couple separates a few months later, John is arrested and found guilty of trespassing in Greta's home and verbally and physically threatening her. Lesbians and gays march for their rights in Washington, D.C.
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TEXTS 1979
Colleen McElroy, African American poet and shortstory writer: Poems.
1979
The Shah of Iran is exiled to the U.S.
Two of the 52 U.S. hostages in the U.S. Embassy in Teheran, Iran, are women: Kathryn Koob and Elizabeth Ann Swift.
Nicholasa Mohr: Felita, a juvenile novel. Eleanor Munro, art historian and memoirist: Originals: American Women Artists.
Beverly Kelley becomes the first woman commander of a Coast Guard ship.
Barbara Noda, Japanese American poet: Strawberries.
Soviet troops invade Afghanistan.
Jayne Anne Phillips, short-story writer, novelist: Black Tickets, stories. Adrienne Rich: On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose 1966-1978. Eileen Simpson: Reversals: A Personal Account of Victory over Dyslexia. Ellease Southerland, African American novelist: Let the Lion Eat Straw. Luz Maria Umpierre, Puerto Rican poet: Una Puertorriquena en penna. 1980s
1980s
Between 80 and 90 percent of heterosexual women engage in premarital sex; for white women
Women Writers in the United States * 367 TEXTS
CONTEXTS 1980s
1980s
in their 20s, the average is four to five partners. Fifty percent of American women diet and almost 80 percent of prepubescent girls restrict their eating for fear of getting fat.
1980
Alice Adams: Rich Rewards, a novel. Jean M. Auel, novelist: The Clan of the Cave Bear, the first in her popular Earth's Children series featuring as the central character a strong woman. Toni Cade Barnbara: The Salt Eaters, a novel. Ann Beattie: Falling in Place, a novel. Elaine Becker, Japanese American dramatist: The Best of Both Worlds. Irene Blea, Chicana poet: Celebrating, Crying, and Cursing. Gwendolyn Brooks: Primer for Blacks. Octavia E. Butler, African American science-fiction writer, begins her genderbending Patternist series with Wild Seed.
1980
The U.S. census allows that the "head of the household" need not be the husband, but is determined by who rents or owns the home. There are approximately 1.9 million Asian American women in the U.S, constituting 51 percent of the total Asian American population. Approximately 1 million Native Americans live in the U.S., down from an estimated pre-contact population of between 25 and 45 million; researchers estimate the life expectancy of contemporary Native Americans to average 45 years and unemployment to be between 60 and 90 percent. Some 2 5 percent of all black men and women between, the ages of 25 and 54 are divorced; the rate is roughly 10 percent for whites.
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TEXTS 1980
Olivia Castellano, Chicana poet: Blue Mandolin, Yellow Field. Jane Chambers: Last Summer at Bluefish Cove. Suzy McKee Charnas: The Vampire Tapestry. Yuan-tsung Chen: The Dragon's Village. Anna Chennault: The Education of Anna, autobiography. Judy Chicago: Embroidering Our Heritage: The Dinner Party Needlework. Sandra Cisneros, Chicana poet and fiction writer: Bad Boys. Michelle Cliff: Claiming an Identity They Taught Me to Despise, poetry. Ann Cornelisen: Strangers and Pilgrims: The Last Italian Migration, nonfiction. Lucha Corpi, Chicana poet and novelist: Palabras de mediodia/Noon Words. Janet Dailey, best-selling romance author: Ride the Thunder. Kiana Davenport: The Power Eaters, a novel.
1980
Almost 50 percent of black households are female-headed. Of the one-third that fall below the poverty line, 70 percent are female-headed. Over 40 percent of the total work force is female; women with children at home constitute 20 percent of the total work force. The Supreme Court rules in Harris v. McRae that Medicaid and other funds for abortion can be cut off within individual states. More than 2000 protesters involved in Women's Pentagon Action protest violence by weaving a human chain around the Pentagon. The first National Women's History Week is celebrated during the first week of March. In 1987 it is expanded into a month. Jean Harris is convicted of killing her lover, the inventor of the Scarsdale diet Herman Tarnower. In El Salvador, three U.S. nuns and a lay worker are murdered.
Women Writers in the United States * 369
TEXTS 1980
Jude Devereaux, popular romance novelist who creates strong heroines: The Black Lyon. Rita Dove, African American poet: The Yellow House on the Corner. Sandra Maria Esteves, Puerto Rican poet: Yerbabuena. Louise Gliick: Descending Figure, poetry. Jorie Graham, poet: Hybrids of Plants and Ghosts. Judy Grahn, poet and novelist: The Work of a Common Woman. Karen Horney: The Adolescent Diaries of Karen Horney. Velina Hasu Houston, African American/Japanese American dramatist: Asa Ga Kimashita (Morning Has Broken). Maxine Hong Kingston: China Men, winner of the American Book Award. Judith Krantz: Princess Daisy, a novel. Shirley Lim, Chinese American poet: Crossing
CONTEXTS
1980
The first National Hispanic Feminist Conference held in California. Judy Chicago begins work on The Birth Project, employing needlework and ceramics to depict childbirth. Hundreds of women are employed to help with the multimedia project. Meryl Streep, actress acclaimed for her work on stage, in film, and in television, receives her first Oscar for her supporting actress role in Kramer vs. Kramer. She is subsequently honored as Best Actress in 1982 for Sophie's Choice. The Bay Area Women's Philharmonic is formed, the only professional female orchestra in the U.S. Its goal is to discover, preserve, and perform works of women composers. An ecofeminist conference is held in Massachusetts. For the first time, the Democratic party includes gay rights in its convention platform. Ronald Reagan is elected President. In this election, 5.5 million more women
370 * Women Writers in the United States
CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1980
the Peninsula and Other Poems. Ruth Limmer, working from journals, notebooks, stories, and letters, puts together Journey around My Room: The Autobiography of Louise Bogan. Hazel Ai Chun Lin: Weeping May Tarry, My Long Night With Cancer, autobiography. Audre Lorde: The Cancer Journals, about her experience with breast cancer. She dies of the disease in 1992. Margarita Melville: Twice a Minority: Mexican American Women. Bette Midler, comedienne, actress, and singer: A View from a Broad, a comic memoir. Joyce Carol Gates: Uefleur, a novel. Jane O'Reilly, journalist and memoirist: The Girl I Left Behind: The Housewife 's Moment of Truth, and Other Feminist Ravings. Marge Piercy: The Moon Is Always Female, poetry.
1980
vote than men; however, 8 to 10% fewer women than men vote for Reagan, resulting in the coinage of the term "gender gap." Nancy Reagan spends $46,000 on her inaugural wardrobe; the average family on welfare this year receives $4600.
Women Writers in the United States * 371 TEXTS 1980
Patricia Preciado Martin, Chicana folklorist and fiction writer: The Legend of the Bellringer of San Agustin, a bilingual children's story.
CONTEXTS 1980
Rina Rocha, Chicana poet: Eluder. Mary Lee Settle: The Scapegoat. Han Suyin: My House Has Two Doors, autobiography. Rowena TiempoTorrevillas, Filipina American fiction writer: "Upon the Willows" and Other Stories. Eudora Welty: The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty. Merle Woo, Chinese American dramatist: Balancing. Wakako Yamauchi: The Music Lessons, a play. 1980-1987
1980-1987
Sales of women's suits rise by 6 million units; sales of dresses decline by 29 million.
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1981
Lisa Alther: Original Sins, a novel. Doris Belts: Heading West. Lorna Dee Cervantes, poet: Emplumada: Poems. C. J. Cherryh: The Pride ofChanur, a sciencefiction novel. Diana Chow, Chinese American poet: An Asian Man of a Different Color. Janet Dailey: Nightways and This Calder Sky, romance novels. Angela Davis, African American author, scholar, and activist: Women, Race, and Class. H.D. (Hilda Doolittle): HERmione, published posthumously. Andrea Dworkin: Pornography: Men Possessing Women. Mari Evans: Nightstar, poetry. Lillian Faderman: Surpassing the Love of Men: Friendship and Love between Women from the Renaissance to the Present.
1981
Fifty-two hostages are released in Iran. Scientists identify Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS); in this year, 225 people die of AIDS and the Gay Men's Health Crisis is formed in New York City. Sandra Day O'Connor becomes the first female Supreme Court justice. Fourteen percent of all judges and lawyers are women. A Human Life Amendment, declaring a fetus a person, is first introduced in Congress. Cosmetic surgery becomes the fastest growing medical specialty. Studies estimate up to three-quarters of all women suffer from Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), an estimate that throws its definition as an "abnormal" hormonal cycle into question. The Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues introduces the Women's Economic Equity Act, a
Women Writers in the United States * 313 TEXTS
1981
Caroline Gordon: The Collected Stories. Patricia Hampl: A Romantic Education, a memoir. bell hooks: Ain't IA Woman? Clara Mitsuko Jelsma, Japanese American autobiographer: Teapot Tales. Akemi Kikumura, Japanese American autobiographer: Through Harsh Winters: The Life of a Japanese Immigrant Woman. Alice Roller: An Unknown Woman, described by one reviewer as "a woman's Walden." Elisabeth Kiibler-Ross: Living with Death and Dying. Helena Kuo: Dong Kingman's Watercolors. Bette Bao Lord: Spring Moon: A Novel of China. Beverly Lowry: Daddy's Girl. Alison Lurie: The Language of Clothes.
CONTEXTS
1981
comprehensive package of bills concerning issues such as child care, insurance, and pensions. A domestic violence bill passes in the House but is defeated in the Senate, largely due to a vigorous campaign by conservative Christian groups. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that almost twice as many women who are heads of households are unemployed than are male heads of household (10.6 percent for women compared with 5.8 percent for men). National Institute for Women of Color is founded. Centennial anniversary of the American Association of University Women. The West Coast Ecofeminist Conference is held in California. The world watches as Lady Diana Spencer marries Prince Charles of England. A Cosmopolitan survey finds 41 percent of women engage in extra-
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1981
Ruthanne Lum McCunn: Thousand Pieces of Gold, a fictionalized biography of Lain Nathoy (Polly Bemis), who was sold in 1872 on the block in San Francisco, but was at the end of her life a respected homesteader on the Salmon River in Idaho. Maria Martinez, Chicana poet: Sterling Silver Roses. Joyce Maynard: Baby Love, a novel about the experiences of several teenage mothers. Mary Mebane, African American autobiographer: Mary. Toni Morrison: Tar Baby, a novel. Sylvia Plath: The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath, published posthumously, winner of Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1982. Minnie Bruce Pratt, poet and critic: The Sound of One Fork, poetry. Adricnne Rich: A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far: Poems, 19781981.
1981
marital affairs, up from 8 percent in 1948. The Hearst Corporation purchases William Morrow & Co., adding it and its subsidiaries to Hearst's other imprints, including Avon and Arbor House. Lena Home wins a Tony Award for her one-woman Broadway show, Lena Home: The Lady and Her Music. The Marciano brothers introduce "Guess" jeans to American customers. Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press is established. A cover story of an issue of the New York Times Magazine begins, "The women's movement is over. . . ."
Women Writers in the United States * 375 TEXTS 1981
Jane Rule: Outlander, collection of short stories with lesbian themes. Anne Sexton: The Complete Poems, posthumously published. Marjorie Shostak, American anthropologist, interviews Nisa, a member of one of the few remaining pre-agricultural tribes, and together they produce Nisa: The Life and Words of a .'Kung Woman. Alix Kates Shulman: On the Stroll. Leslie Marmon Silko: Storyteller, collection of stories, poems, and photographs. Silko receives a MacArthur Foundation award this same year. Elizabeth Spencer: The Collected Stories of Elizabeth Spencer. Danielle Steel, popular romance novelist: Remembrance. Gina Valdez, Chicana novelist: There Are No Madmen Here. Alice Walker: You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down, short stories.
CONTEXTS 1981
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1981
Wendy Wasserstein: Isn 't It Romantic?, a play.
1981-1989
1982
All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave, Gloria T. Hull, Patricia Bell-Scott, and Barbara Smith, eds. Breaking the Silences: 20th Century Poetry by Cuban Women, Margaret Randall, ed. Two highly successful and continuing series of mystery novels featuring female detectives are launched: Sara Paretsky's Indemnity Only, with V. I. Warshawski, and Sue Grafton's "A" Is for Alibi, with Kinsey Millhone. Paula Gunn Allen, Laguna Pueblo novelist, poet, and critic: Shadow Country, a collection of verse. Marion Zimmer Bradley: The Mists ofAvalon, bestselling rewriting of the Arthurian legend from the
1981
1981-1989
Sexual harassment charges filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission rise 70 percent.
1982
The Equal Rights Amendment is defeated when it fails to be ratified by the required 38 states; Phyllis Macalpin (Stewart) Schlafly, founder and chair of STOP ERA and the Eagle Forum, hosts an end-of-ERA party. The first state lesbian and gay rights bill is passed, in Wisconsin. The first national convention of the Older Women's League is held in Louisville, Kentucky. In Wisconsin, a judge hearing the case of a 24year-old man who sexually assaulted a five-yearold declares the child the "aggressor" in the case and describes her as "an unusually sexually permissive young lady"; he is subsequently recalled from the bench. With 27 percent of all Filipina women holding col-
Women Writers in the United States * 577 TEXTS 1982
perspective of the female characters. Rita Mae Brown: Southern Discomfort, a novel. Irma Cervantes, Chicana poet: Sparks, Flames, and Cinders. Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Korean American poet and short-story writer: Dictee, prose and poetry. Diana Chang: The Horizon Is Definitely Speaking, poetry. Annie Dillard: Teaching a Stone to Talk: Expeditions and Encounters, nature writing, and Living by Fiction, literary criticism. Carolyn Forche: The Country Between Us, poetry written in reaction to Forche's experiences in El Salvador, it reignites debates over the "appropriateness" of political subjects for poetry.
CONTEXTS 1982
lege degrees, they are better educated than any other population group, male or female, in the country. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is dedicated. The V-shaped memorial, with walls of black granite inscribed with the names of U.S. men and women killed or missing in the Vietnam War, was designed by Maya Ying Lin, a Yale architecture student whose plan was chosen in a public competition. Maggie Brewer becomes the first woman Marine general. Barnard College hosts a conference that launches what come to be known as "the sex debates" about pornography, sexual politics, and pleasure. "Victoria's Secret" becomes a national chain of lingerie stores.
Betty Friedan: The Second Stage.
Millions go on the "Beverly Hills Diet."
Carol Gilligan: In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development.
USA Today is founded.
318 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1982
Judy Grahn: The Queen of Wands, poetry. Maureen Howard: Grace Abounding, a novel. Jeanne Joe, Chinese American essayist: Pieces of a Childhood, about being raised by a single parent in Chicago's Chinatown. Chungmi Kim, Korean American poet: Chumgmi, Selected Poems. Judith Krantz: Mistral's Daughter, a novel Carol Lem: Don't Ask
Why. Genny Lim, Chinese American dramatist: Paper Angels. Susan Lloyd completes a revision of Roget's Thesaurus that results in a nonsexist edition. Audre Lorde: Zami: A New Spelling of My Name, biomythography. Mina Loy: The Last Lunar Baedecker, collection of poetry. Alice McDermott: A Bigamist's Daughter, a Novel.
CONTEXTS 1982
Women Writers in the United States * 379 TEXTS 1982
Laureen Mar, Chinese American poet: Living Furniture. Bobbie Ann Mason: Shiloh and Other Stories. Gloria Naylor, African American novelist: The Women ofBrewster Place, winner of American Book Award and National Book Award. Naomi Shihab Nye, poet: Hugging the Jukebox, winner of the National Poetry Series Award. Joyce Carol Gates: A Bloodsmoor Romance, a novel, and Invisible Woman: New and Selected Poems. Alicia Ostriker: A Woman under the Surface: Poems and Prose Poems. Marge Piercy: Circles on the Water, poetry. Sylvia Plath: The Journals of Sylvia Plath, published posthumously. Katherine Quintana Ranck, Chicana novelist: Portrait of Dona Elena. Susan Sheehan: Is There No Place on Earth for
CONTEXTS 1982
380 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1982
Me?, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction in 1983. Kate Simon: Bronx Primitive: Portraits in a Childhood, autobiography. Lee Smith: Cakewalk, a novel. Cathy Song, Korean American poet: Picture Bride, which wins the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. Meredith Tax, Jewish American novelist: Rivington Street. Sheila Ortiz Taylor, Chicana novelist: Faultlinc. Anne Truitt, minimalist sculptor and memoirist: Daybook: The Journal of an Artist. Anne Tyler, novelist and short-story writer: Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant. Yoshiko Uchida, Japanese American autobiographer: Desert Exile: The Uprooting of a Japanese American Family. Mona Van Duyn, poet: Letters from a Father.
CONTEXTS 1982
Women Writers in the United States
TEXTS
1982
Evangelina Vigil, Chicana poet: Thirty an' Seen a Lot.
381
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1982
Alice Walker: The Color Purple, wins American Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize. Alice Waters, chef and author: The Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook, an influential work based on her restaurant's emphasis on classical meals based on fresh, seasonal ingredients. Sylvia Wilkinson: Bone of My Bones.
1983
Black Women Writers 1950-1980, Mari Evans, ed. Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology, Barbara Smith, ed. Shirley Abbott: Womenfolks: Growing Up Down South. Kathy Acker: Great Expectations, a novel. Paula Gunn Allen: The Woman Who Owned the Shadows, a novel.
Lynne Alvarez, Chicana poet and playwright: The
1983
U.S. troops invade Grenada. Some 444 Women's Studies programs offer courses in colleges and universities nationwide. Hardcover books represent 46 percent of books sold, down from 54 percent five years earlier. Minneapolis passes an anti-pornography ordinance but it is vetoed by the city's mayor; Indianapolis's anti-pornography ordinance, passed in 1984, is struck down in federal court.
382 4 Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1983
Guitarron and Hidden Pans, winner of Kesselring Award. Gloria Anzaldua and Cherric Moraga, eds.: This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge: The Heat Bird and Packrat Sieve. Becky Birtha, African American lesbian shortstory writer and poet: For Nights like This One: Stories of Loving Women. Elizabeth Bishop: The Complete Poems, 19271979. Judy Blume: Smart Women, a novel Erma Bombeck: Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession. Igiiatia Broker, an Ojibway elder, storyteller, and educator: Night Flying Woman: An Ojibwa Narrative, a telling of the life of Ni-bo-wi-se-gwe, Broker's great-greatgrandmother.
1983
Elizabeth Dole, the first female Secretary of Transportation, is sworn in by Sandra Day O'Connor, the first female Supreme Court Justice. Asian Immigrant Women Advocates is formed to fight for economic justice in Oakland, California. The first national meeting of incest survivors is hosted by VOICE, Inc., in Kansas City. A woman is gang-raped on a pool table in a bar in New Bedford, Massachusetts; her story and case against her rapists and those who cheered them on captures public attention and becomes the subject of the film The Accused, for which actress Jodie Foster wins an Oscar in the starring role in 1988. Sally Ride becomes the first American female astronaut in space. Twenty percent, or one in five, babies in the U.S. are delivered through Cesarean section, up 7 percent since 1977.
Women Writers in the United States * 383 TEXTS
1983
Amy Clampitt (19201995), whose poems have been appearing in The New Yorker since 1978, publishes her first collection: The Kingfisher. She describes her design as that of an "illuminated manuscript" with "verbal handwork." Ann Cornelisen: Any Four Women Could Rob the Bank of Italy, a novel. Janet Dailey: Calder Born, Calder Bred, popular romance novel. Toi Derricotte: Natural Birth, poetry. Barbara Ehrenreich: The Hearts of Men: The American Dream and the Flight from Commitment.
Patricia Enrado, Filipina fiction writer: House of Images. Nikki Giovanni: Those Who Ride the Night Winds, poetry. Marita Golden, African American novelist: Migrations of the Heart, autobiography.
CONTEXTS
1983
The Dalkon Shield, an intrauterine contraceptive device, proves unsafe in many cases, leading to its withdrawal from the market. Popular singer Karen Carpenter dies from complications of her long straggle with anorexia. Dr. Barbara McClintock, the geneticist who discovered "jumping genes," becomes the first woman to win an unshared Nobel Prize for medicine. Singer and actress Madonna releases her first album, Madonna. Barbara Kruger, a feminist artist who often puts her photographs on billboards, forming subversive collages, opens her exhibit We Won't Play Nature to Your Culture. Performance artist Laurie Anderson opens her magnum opus, "United States, Parts I-V." Audrey Flack, who has done expressionist selfportraits and now works with sculpture, produces many Photorealist can-
384 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1983
Rosa Guy, African American novelist: A Measure of Time. Joy Harjo: She Had Some Horses, poetry. Momoko Iko: The Gold Watch. Joyce Johnson: Minor Characters, an account of her affair with Jack Kerouac and experiences with the Beat Generation; winner of the National Book Critics' Circle Award for biography and autobiography. Gayl Jones: White Rat, short stories. Elaine H. Kim with Janice Otani: With Silk Wings: Asian American Women at Work, pictorial history. Wendy Law-Yone, Burmese American novelist: The Coffin Tree. Shirley MacLaine, actress, entertainer, and New Age explorer: Out on a Limb. Paule Marshall: Reena and Other Short Stories, reissue of short fiction, critical es-
1983
vases, such as Fruits of the Earth, in this year. Underwear manufacturer Jockey introduces its "Jockey for Her" line, featuring comfortable cotton undergarments.
Women Writers in the United States * 385 TEXTS 1983
say, and a new novella, "Merle," and Praisesong for the Widow, a novel. Mary Mebane: Mary Wayfarer, autobiographical novel. Cherrfe Moraga, Chicana short-story writer: Loving in the War Years: Lo que nunca paso par sus labios. Marsha Norman: 'night Mother, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for drama. Estela Portillo Trambley: Sor Juana and Other Plays. Patricia Preciado Martin: Images and Conversations: Mexican-Americans Recall a Southwestern Past. Francine Prose: Hungry Hearts, a novel. Ninotchka Rosca: The Monsoon Collection, stories. Joanna Russ: How to Suppress Women's Writing, a humorous and insightful exploration of the social forces that led to the neglect and disparagement of women's writing.
CONTEXTS 1983
386 + Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1983
Susan Fromberg Schaeffer: The Madness of a Seduced Woman.
CONTEXTS 1983
Lee Smith: Oral History, a novel. Danielle Steel: Changes and Crossings, novels. Gloria Steinem: Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. Carmen Tafolla, Chicana poet: Curandera. Joyce Carol Thomas, educator and young-adult novelist: Bright Shadow. Bessie ToishigawaInouye, Japanese American dramatist: Reunion. Kitty Tsui, Chinese American poet: The Words of a Woman Who Breathes Fire. Alice Walker: In Search of Our Mother's Gardens, collection of essays. Eudora Welty: One Writer's Beginnings. 1983-1987
1983-1987
This four-year period shows a 100 percent increase in the number of women entering domestic shelters.
Women Writers in the United States * 387 TEXTS
1984
Filipina I, anthology of fiction and poetry by Filipina writers, Marra Lanot and Mila Garcia, eds., Filipina II, essays and journalism, published 1985. The New Our Bodies, Ourselves. That's What She Said, an anthology of poetry and fiction by Native American women, Rayna Green, ed. Kathy Acker: Blood Guts in High School.
CONTEXTS
1984
The Family Violence Prevention and Services Act helps finance battered women shelters. Some 53 percent of women polled believe there will be a woman President by the turn of the century; three years later, only 40 percent express this belief. President Reagan institutes an international gag rule on family planning clinics abroad receiving U.S. funds.
Lynne Alvarez: The Dreaming Man.
Twenty-nine American abortion and family planning clinics undergo bombing and arson attacks.
Mary Catherine Bateson: With a Daughter's Eye: A Memoir of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson.
The Supreme Court guts educational bias protection under Title IX.
Barbara Brinson-Pineda: Vocabulary of the Dead, poetry.
The Supreme Court rules that the Jaycees cannot bar women from membership.
Alice Adams: Superior Women, a novel.
Linda Brown, African American novelist: Rainbow Roun' Mah Shoulder. Rosellen Brown: Civil Wars.
Two parts of the Economic Equity Act are passed; the first helps women collect on private pensions; the second enforces child support by allowing for interstate col-
388 * Women Writers in the United States
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TEXTS
1984
Rosemary Catacalos, Chicana poet: Again for the First Time. Sandra Cisneros: The House on Mango Street, a lyrical novel that wins the Before Columbus Award. J. California Cooper, African American short-story writer and novelist: A Piece of Mine, short stories.
1984
lection and withholding of wages. Astronaut Kathryn Sullivan walks in space, the first U.S. woman to do so. The Reverend Jesse Jackson runs for President.
Jane Cooper, poet: Scaffolding: Neiv and Selected Poems.
The Democratic Party names Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro as its vice presidential nominee, making her the first woman to run as the vice presidential candidate for a major political party.
Kiana Davenport: Wild Spenders, a novel.
Ronald Reagan is reelected President.
Suzette Hayden Elgin, science-fiction writer and communications scholar: Native Tongue, a novel.
One-third of all law school graduates are women.
Sandra Maria Esteves, Puerto Rican poet: Tropical Rains: A Bilingual Downpour.
Seventy-five percent of American women aged 18 to 35 regard themselves as fat, while only 25 percent are actually overweight; the same year, a survey for Glamour magazine finds that more women would choose weight loss over success in work or in interpersonal relations as a potential source of happiness.
Linda Kalayaan Faigao, Eilipina dramatist: State without Grace.
The first black Miss America, Vanessa Williams, relinquishes her ti-
Louise Erdrich, Native American novelist and poet: Love Medicine, novel, and winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Jacklight, poetry.
Women Writers in the United States * 389 TEXTS
1984
Ellen Gilchrist, novelist, short-story writer, poet: The Annunciation, a novel, and Victory over Japan, collection of short stories and winner of National Book Award. Beatrix Gonzalez, Chicana poet: The Chosen Few. Judy Grahn: Another Mother Tongue: Gay Words, Gay Worlds, essays. Doris Kawano, Japanese American autobiographer: Harue, Child of Hawaii. Susan Kenney: In Another Country, a novel. The Kensington Ladies' Erotica Society: Ladies' Own Erotica. Carolyn Kizer: Mermaids in the Basement: Poems for Woman and Yin: New Poems. The latter wins the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1985. Andrea Lee: Sarah Phillips, an autobiographical novel about her experiences growing up as an economically privileged African American girl.
CONTEXTS
1984
tie after nude photographs taken when she was younger appear in Penthouse magazine. Former news anchor Christine Craft wins a monetary award against a Kansas City television station for demoting her based on her looks and her failure to be "deferential" to men; even though two juries find in her favor, a judge later overturns their ruling. In the Los Angeles Olympics, Joan Benoit wins the first women's marathon. Some 1.6 million office visits are made to physicians for infertility services, up from 600,000 in 1968.
390 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1984
Amy Ling, Chinese American poet: Chinamerican Reflections: Poems and Paintings. Audre Lorde: Sister Outsider, essays. Alison Lurie: Foreign Affairs, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel. Jill McCorkle: July 7th: A Novel. Pat Mora, Chicana poet: Chants. Joyce Carol Gates: Mysteries of Winterthurn, a novel. Sharon Olds, poet: The Dead and the Living. Jayne Anne Phillips: Machine Dreams, a novel. Janice Radway, feminist scholar: Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy, and Popular Literature, a study combining interviews, reader response criticism, sociological analysis, arid feminist psychology to examine women's relationship to romance fiction. Myrna Pena Reyes, Filipina poet: The River Sing-
CONTEXTS 1984
Women Writers in the United States * 391 TEXTS
1984
ing Stone, collection of poetry.
CONTEXTS 1984
Joanna Russ: Extra(ordinary) People, a science fiction novel. Sonia Sanchez: Homegirls and Handgrenades, winner of the American Book Award. Sarah Schulman, lesbian novelist and social critic: The Sophie Horowitz Story, a novel. Barbara Tuchman: The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam, history. Katherine Wei and Terry Quinn: Second Daughter, Growing Up in China 1930-1949, a memoir. Roberta Hill Whiteman, Native American woman of the Oneida tribe: Star Quilt. Nellie Wong: The Death of a Long Steam Lady, poetry.
1985
Landmark studies and anthologies in the recovery of literature by women and the study of the role of gender and race in literature and literary history appear: Barbara Chris-
1985
Fifteen thousand people die of AIDS. United Nations World Women's Conference is held in Nairobi.
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TEXTS
1985
tian's Black Feminist Criticism: Perspectives on Black Women Writers, Lucy M. Freibert and Barbara A. White's Hidden Hands: An Anthology of American Women Writers, 17901870, Annette Kolodny's The Land Before Her: Fantasy and Experience of the American Frontiers, 1630— 1860, Marjorie Pryse and HortenseJ. Spillers's Conjuring: Black Women, Fiction, and Literary Tradition, and Jane Tompkins's Sensational Designs: The Cultural Work of American Fiction, 1190-1860, followed by Cathy N. Davidson's Revolution and the Word: 'The Rise of the Novel in America in 1986. Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence, Rosemary Curb and Nancy Manahan, eds. Gemma Bergonio, Filipina poet: Mirror at Daivn and Other Poems. Beth Brant, Native American fiction writer, poet, essayist, and activist: Mohawk Trail, a collection of prose and poetry. Olga Broumas and Jane Miller: Black Holes, Black Stockings, collaborative poetry.
1985
The median age of marriage for women is 23.2 years; for men, 25.5 years. EMILY's (Early Money Is Like Yeast) List, a prochoice, pro-women'srights Democratic group, begins its fund-raising for and sponsorship of Democratic women candidates. Montana becomes the first state to ban insurance rates based on marital status and sex. Tracy Thurman becomes the first woman to win a civil suit against her husband for battery. Portland, Oregon's, Penny Harrington becomes the first female chief of a major U.S. police department. The Meese Commission on pornography is established. The first meeting of the Indigenous Women's Network, a coalition for the rights of Native American women, is held in Washington state. Amy Eilberg is ordained as Conservative Judaism's first woman rabbi.
Women Writers in the United States * 393 TEXTS
1985
Evelina Chao, Chinese American novelist: Gates of Grace. Judy Chicago: The Birth Project, about her multimedia art exhibit. Carolyn Chute: The Beans of Egypt, Maine, a novel. Margarita Cota-Cardeiias, Chicana novelist: Puppet, an experimental novel. The Diary of Alice DunbarNelson, Gloria T. Hull ed. and publisher, Gretel Ehrlich, Wyoming novelist and essayist, writing about life in the West: The Solace of Open Spaces. Sheila Finch, fantasist: Infinity's Web. Elizabeth Frank: Louise Bogan: A Portrait, winner of Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1986. Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston: Beyond Manzanar: A View of Asian American Womanhood. Susan Howe: My Emily Dickinson, a work of creative scholarship.
CONTEXTS
1985
Gwendolyn Brooks becomes the first African American woman to serve as Poetry Consultant to the Library of Congress. Lily Tomlin takes her one-woman comedy show with its strong social messages, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, around the country. It is co-written by Tomlin and Jane Wagner. Tania Aebi, 19, sets sail alone on a voyage around the world, which she completes in 1987, becoming the first American woman and the youngest person to sail around the world solo. Libby Riddles becomes the first woman to win the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, a 1135-mile race from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska. Folk music becomes popular again with the advent of singers such as Suzanne Vega, who releases her first album this year. The Jane Fonda Workout Video becomes the topgrossing video of all time. Fonda is voted "The Number One Heroine of Young Americans" in a U.S News Roper poll.
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1985
Angela de Hoyos: Woman, Woman. Josephine Humphreys, southern novelist: Dreams of Sleep. Ada Louise Huxtable: The Tall Building Artistically Reconsidered. June Jordan: Living Room: New Poems, 1980-84. Jamaica Kincaid, Antiguan-born fiction writer: Annie John. Ruthanne Lum McCunn: Sole Survivor, biography. Shirley MacLaine: Dancing in the Light. Diane Mei Lin Mark and Ginger Chih: A Place Called Chinese America, pictorial history. Bobbie Ann Mason: In Country, a novel. Pat Matsueda, Japanese American poet: The Fishcatcher. Nicholasa Mohr: Rituals of Survival: A Woman's Portfolio, six vignettes about adult Puerto Rican women, each representing
1985
Americans spend more than $5 billion on efforts to lose weight.
Women Writers in the United States * 395 TEXTS 1985
different lifestyles, ages, and circumstances. Mary Monroe, African American novelist: The Upper Room. Bharati Mukherjee: Darkness, short stories. Gloria Naylor: Linden Hills, a novel. Grace Paley: Later the Same Day, collection of stories. Linda Pastan: A Fraction of Darkness, poetry. Cecile Pineda, Chicana novelist: Face. Anne Rice: The Vampire Lestat, a novel. May Sarton: The Magnificent Spinster. Anne Sexton: No Evil Star: Selected Essays, Interviews, and Prose, Steven E. Colburn, ed., posthumously published. Ntozake Shange: Betsey Brown, a novel. Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, feminist social historian: Disorderly Conduct: Visions of Gender in Victorian
CONTEXTS 1985
396 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1985
America, an influential investigation into the gendered nature of intimate relationships in 19th-century America. Danielle Steel: Secrets, a novel. Han Suyin: The Enchantress, a novel. Meredith Tax: Union Square. Luisah Teish, African American author: Jambalay a: The Natural Woman's Book of Personal Charms and Practical Rituals, described as a collection of ceremonies for the African and African American extended family. Minh Due Hoai Trinh, Vietnamese American novelist: This Side, the Other Side. Linda Ty-Casper: Fortress in the Plaza and Awaiting Trespass, novellas. Anne Tyler: The Accidental Tourist, a novel. Luz Maria Umpierre: En el pats de la maravillas
CONTEXTS 1985
Women Writers in the. United States * 391 TEXTS
1985
and Y otras desgracias/And Other Misfortunes.
CONTEXTS 1985
Helena Maria Viramontes, Chicana shortstory writer: The Moths and Other Stories. Anna Lee Walters, Native American author: The Sun Is Not Merciful, short stories. Yoko Kawashima Watkins, Japanese American novelist: So Far from the Bamboo Grove. mid-1980s
1986
At a breakfast meeting at the Bouchercon Conference, an annual mystery writers' meeting, a group of women led by Sara Paretsky founds Sisters in Crime, an organization whose goal is to promote mysteries written by women. Ai: Sin: Poems. Kathy Acker: Don Quixote, a novel. Paula Gunn Allen: The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the
mid-1980s
Poet Robert Ely conducts all-male workshops, launching the "Men's Movement."
1986
In the Iran-Contra deal, arms are traded for hostages. U.S. planes bomb Libya. The Parental and Medical Leave Act is introduced in Congress. Full-time working women make only about 64 cents to a man's dollar. Unanimous decision by the Supreme Court finds that sexual harassment is illegal job discrimination.
398 * Women Writers in the United States
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TEXTS
1986
Feminine in American Indian Tradition. Maya Angelou: All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes, autobiography.
Ann Beattie: Where You'll Find Me, short stories. Rita Mae Brown: High Hearts, a novel. Olivia Castellano: Spaces That Time Missed, poetry. Ana Castillo: The Mixquihuala Letters, poetry. Suzy McKee Charnas: Dorothea Dreams, science fiction/fantasy novel. Denise Chavez, Chicana novelist: The Last of the Menu Girls, winner of the Puerto del Sol fiction award. Nien Cheng: Life and Death in Shanghai, autobiography by Chinese American woman. Alice Childress: Like One of the Family: Conversations from a Domestic's Life.
Cheryl Clarke: Living as a Lesbian, poetry.
1986
Seventy-two percent of childhood sexual abuse is perpetrated by fathers and stepfathers. The space shuttle Challenger explodes, killing all seven crew members, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe and astronaut Judith Resnik. Randall Terry forms "Operation Rescue," an antiabortion movement determined to close family planning clinics nationwide. Sears wins in a lawsuit charging the company with sex discrimination in hiring policies and practices. In the much-publicized "Preppy Murder" case, Robert Chambers is accused of murdering Jennifer Levin. Media and trend analyst Faith Popcorn coins the word "cocooning" to describe what she sees as an increasing American trend to stay home and "nest." Women's AIDS Project, the first of its kind, is formed in Los Angeles.
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1986
Rita Dove: Thomas and Beulah, Pulitzer Prizewinning volume of poetry. Louise Erdrich: The Beet Queen, a novel. Cynthia Felice: Double Nocturne, a science-fiction novel. Ellen Gilchrist: Drunk •with Love, short stories. Marianne Gingher: Bobby Rex's Greatest Hits. Tama Janowitz: Slaves of New York, short stories. Ronyoung Kim (19261987), Korean American novelist: Clay Walls. Audre Lorde: Our Dead behind Us, a collection of essays. Nancy Mairs: Plaintext: Deciphering a Woman's Life. Carole Maso: Ghost Dance, a novel. Sue Miller, novelist and short-story writer: The Good Mother. Nicholasa Mohr: Going Home, a juvenile novel and sequel to Felita.
399
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1986
A Gallup poll for Newsweek finds that a majority of women (56 percent) consider themselves feminists while 4 percent consider themselves "antifeminists." One hundred thousand women march for prochoice in Washington, D.C. Ann Bancroft becomes the first woman ever to walk to the North Pole. Canadian-born k.d. lang becomes country music's first openly lesbian hit singer. Dorothy I. Height, African American human rights activist, member of President's Commission on the "Status of Women," delegate for the United Nations MidDecade Conference on Women, and president of the National Council of Negro Women, organizes the Black Family Reunion Celebration to emphasize the strengths of African American families. An estimated 5 to 10 percent of all adolescent girls and young women are anorexic; 90 to 95 percent
400 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1986
Pat Mora, Chicana poet: Borders. Cherrie Moraga: Giving Up the Ghost: Teatro in Two Acts. Aurora Levins Morales: Getting Home Alive, short stories, essays, prose poems, and poetry by Puerto Rican American author, in collaboration with her mother, Rosario Morales. Tran Thi Nga and Wendy Larson: Shallow Graves: Two Women and Vietnam, poetry. Joyce Carol Gates: Marya, a Life, a novel. Francine Prose: Bigfoot Dreams, a novel. Adrienne Rich: Blood, Bread, and Poetry, essays, and Your Native Land, Your Life, poetry. Beverly Silva, Chicana short-story writer: The Cat and Other Stories. Kate Simon: A Wider World, memoir. Mona Simpson, novelist: Anywhere but Here.
1986
of anorexics are young and female; a disproportionate number are white and upper- or middleclass; as many as 19 percent die from this disease.
Women Writers in the United States * 401 TEXTS 1986
Joan Slonczewski: A Door into the Ocean, a Utopian novel.
CONTEXTS
1986
Estela Portillo Trambley: Trini, a novel. Sherley Ann Williams, African American novelist: Dessa Rose.
1987
Rivers Running Free, Judith Niemi, ed., is an anthology of canoeing women. Gloria Anzaldua: Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. Doris Jean Austin, African American novelist: After the Garden. Marita Bonner (18991971), African American author: Frye Street and Its Environs: Collected Works of Marita Bonner, reprinted posthumously. Octavia Butler begins her Xenogenesis series. Xam Wilson Carrier, African American novelist: Be-bop, Re-bop. Marilyn Chin, Chinese American poet: Dwarf Bamboo.
1987
Women make up 15.2 percent of physicians in the U.S. Forty-thousand people die of AIDS. The National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights draws some 500,000 people. Of women surveyed, 87 percent say there is nothing wrong with a single woman bearing and raising a child by herself. Women own 30 percent of all U.S. businesses. No abortion services are offered by 85 percent of U.S. counties. The National Clearinghouse for the Defense of Battered Women is founded and based in Philadelphia.
402
Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS 1987
Sandra Cisneros: My Wicked Wicked Ways, poetry. Michelle Cliff: No Telephone to Heaven, a novel. Lucille Clifton: Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir: 1969-1980. J. California Cooper: Some Soul to Keep, short stories. Janet Dailey: Heiress, romance novel Annie Dillard: An American Childhood, a memoir. Carrie Fisher, actress and novelist: Postcards from the Edge, later filmed. Fannie Flagg: Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe, filmed in 1992. Kaye Gibbons: Ellen Foster, a novel. Gail Godwin: A Southern Family, a novel. Vivian Gornick: Fierce Attachments, a memoir. Judy Grahn: The Queen of Swords, poetry.
1987
The Fund for the Feminist Majority is founded. Elizabeth Morgan chooses jail in lieu of letting her daughter spend time alone with her exhusband, whom Morgan accuses of molesting the girl; she is released two years later through a congressional act and wins custody of her child. The Supreme Court denies that men are discriminated against through disability leaves for pregnancy and childbirth. Confirmation of conservative judge Robert H. Bork's appointment to the Supreme Court is denied. English Professor Julia Prewitt Brown wins a nine-year job-bias case against Boston University and becomes the first woman professor reinstated with tenure after losing her tenure decision. Beulah Mae Donald wins her suit against the United Klans of America for the lynching of her son. Her award of $7 million shuts down that unit of the KKK.
Women Writers in the United States * 403 TEXTS
1987
Molly Hite, feminist literary critic and novelist: Class Porn, a novel. Josephine Humphreys: Rich in Love, a novel. Diane Johnson: Persian Nights, a novel. Susanna Kaysen, novelist and memoirist: Asa, As I Knew Him, a novel. Denise Levertov: Breathing the Water, poetry. Beverly Lowry: The Perfect Sonya. Jill McCorkle: Tending to Virginia, a novel. Colleen McElroy: Jesus and Fat Tuesday, and Other Short Stories. Shirley MacLaine: It's All in the Playing. Terry McMillan, African American novelist: Mama, a novel. Sue Miller: Inventing the Abbotts and Other Stories. Toni Morrison: Beloved, wins Pulitzer Prize and Robert F. Kennedy Book Award.
CONTEXTS 1987
The Supreme Court requires Rotary International to admit women members. Fawn Hall, Pentagon secretary, testifies before Congress about Oliver North's shredding of "Contragate" documents. Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder announces that a shortage of funds will prevent her from seeking the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988. Jill Wine-Banks becomes the first female executive director of the American Bar Association. Wilma Mankiller becomes the first woman elected chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. Verna Williamson becomes the first woman governor of the largest pueblo (Isleta) in New Mexico. After her own son is murdered, Clementine Barfield of Detroit founds SoSad, an organization helping families of children killed in urban violence.
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1987
Faye Moskowitz, Jewish American author: A Leak in the Heart. Bharati Mukherjee: The Sorroiv and the Terror: The Haunting Legacy of Air India 182. Eleanor Munro: On Glory Roads: A Pilgrim's Book about Pilgrimage. Joyee Carol Gates: You Must Remember This, a novel. Sharon Olds: The Matter of This World: New and Selected Poems. Cynthia Ozick: The Messiah of Stockholm, a novel. Marge Piercy: Gone to Soldiers, a novel. Mary Helen Ponce, Chicana novelist and shortstory writer: Taking Control, stories. Juanita Ramos: Companeros: Latina Lesbians. Joanna Russ: The Hidden Side of the Moon, short stories. Jessica Saiki, Japanese American novelist: "'Once, a Lotus Garden," and Other Stories.
1987
Louise Chia Chang and Elizabeth Lee Wilmer, high school students, place first and second, respectively, in the prestigious Westinghouse Science Talent Search. Hearing-impaired actress Marlee Matlin wins an Academy Award for Best Actress for Children of a Lesser God. The popular television show Cagney and Lacey is canceled; it had been widely credited for being one of the few shows to portray women's lives realistically and sympathetically. The film Fatal Attraction opens and the Glenn Close character soon becomes "the most hated woman in America." The National Museum of Women in the Arts opens.
Women Writers in the United States * 405 TEXTS 1987
Sonia Sanchez: Under a Soprano Sky, poetry. Melissa Scott, sciencefiction writer: The Kindly Ones, a novel in which the gender of the first-person narrator is never identified. AJix Kates Shulman: In Every IVoman's Life . . . A Time Must Come to Think About Marriage, a novel. Eileen Simpson: Orphans, Real and Imaginary, a memoir of life with her first husband, John Berryman, and his circle of fellow writers, including Randall Jarrell, Delmore Schwartz, Robert Lowell, Jean Stafford, Allen Tate, and Caroline Gordon. Rosamond Smith, a pseudonym for Joyce Carol Gates: Lives of the Twins, a suspense novel. Ruth Stone: Second-Hand Coat, poetry. Yoshiko Uchida: Picture Bride: A Novel. Evangelina Vigil: The Computer Is Down, poetry.
CONTEXTS 1987
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1987
Marta Weigle edits Two Guadalupes: Hispanic Legends and Magic Tales from Northern New Mexico.
1987
1988
The publication of the Schomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers, under the general editorship of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., makes accessible thirty volumes of writing by nineteenth-century black women, much of it long unavailable.
1988
Las Mujeres Hablan: An Anthology ofNuevo Mexicana Writers, Diana TeyRebolledo, Erlinda Gonzales-Berry, and Teresa Marquez, eds. Without Ceremony, special issue of Ikon 9, edited by Asian Women United of New York. You Can't Drown the Fire: Latin American Women Writing in Exile, Alicia Partnoy, ed. Kathy Acker: Empire of the Senseless, a novel. Paula Gunn Allen: Skins and Bones: Poems 1979-87. Rita Mae Brown: Bingo, a novel.
Ninety percent of federal AFDC recipients are women; 66 percent of those dependent on federally subsidized housing and legal services are women; 60 percent of those drawing on Medicaid and receiving food stamps are women. Congress passes the Civil Rights Restoration Act, restoring many of the rights (including protection against educational bias) stripped away by the Supreme Court in recent years. The Family Support Act passed by Congress puts steps in place for automatic withholding from the parent's paycheck in child support cases. More first children are born than in any other year on record. A study calculates that on any given night in the U.S., there are about 735,000 people homeless.
Women Writers in the United States * 407 TEXTS
1988
Carolyn Chute: Letourmau 's Used Auto Pans, a novel. Mary Higgins Clark: Weep No More, My Lady, a suspense novel. Ella Deloria: Waterlily, a novel written in the 1940s but published posthumously. Put together from ethnographic materials and interviews, it depicts a Sioux woman's life in the nineteenth century. Beverly Donofrio: Riding in Cars with Boys: Confessions of a Bad Girl Who Makes Good, memoirs of a teenage mother. Grace EdwardsYearwood, African American novelist: In the Shadow of the Peacock. Gretel Ehrlich: Heart Mountain, a novel. Phyllis Eisenstein: The Crystal Palace.
CONTEXTS
1988
Thirty-five states pass parental consent requirements for abortion; 30 states and Washington, D.C., ban state Medicaidfunded abortions. The "Baby M" case: the Supreme Court rules that surrogate contracts, like the one between William and Elizabeth Stern and surrogate mother Maiy Beth Whitehead (artificially inseminated with Stern's sperm), cannot be enforced and custody goes to the sperm donor (the father) instead of the egg donor (the surrogate mother). Grieving mother Cynthia Harris forms Stop! the Madness Foundation in Washington, D.C., to fight drug-related crimes there. More than 2 million women have had breast implants; 100,000 have had liposuction.
Louise Erdrich: Tracks, a novel.
Jane Rideout, chemist, leads a team of researchers to win the patent for AZT, an AIDS drug.
Martha Gellhorn: The Face of War, a collection of journalistic essays.
Lansing, Michigan's, Playboy Club, the last in the nation, closes.
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1988
Nikki Giovanni: Sacred Cows and Other Edibles. Judy Grahn: Mundane's World, a novel. Alice Hoffman: At Risk, a novel about AIDS. Velina Hasu Houston: My Life a Loaded Gun, a play. Janet Kagan, sciencefiction writer: Hellspark. Barbara Kingsolver: The Bean Trees, a novel. Alice P. Lin, Chinese American memoirist: Grandmother Had No Name. Ruthanne Lum McCunn: Chinese American Portraits: Personal Histories 18281988. Bobbie Ann Mason: Spence + Lila, a novel. Eleanor Munro: Memoir of a Modernist's Daughter. Gloria Naylor: Mama Day, a novel. Marge Piercy. Available Light, poetry.
1988
The Columbia Literary History of the United States is published. Only 43 communities produce competing daily newspapers, down from some 500 sixty-five years before. Sassy magazine, modeled upon the Australian teen magazine Dolly, appears on the newsstands, providing girls with explicit information on sexuality; Sassy's frankness is eventually watered down after conservative groups pressure its advertisers. Florence Griffith Joyner and Jackie Joyner-Kersee, sisters-in-law, win five gold medals between them at the Olympics. Soviet troops begin withdrawal from Afghanistan. New Alliance Party candidate Lenora Fulani becomes the first woman and first black whose name appears on all 50 states' ballots as a presidential candidate. Only two women ran for Senate, the smallest number in a decade and down from ten in 1984.
Women Writers in the United States * 409 TEXTS
1988
Patricia Preciado Martin: Days of Plenty, Days of Want, stories. Anne Rice: The Queen of the Damned, third in the Vampire Chronicles. Jane Smiley, novelist, essayist, and short-story writer: The Greenlanders, a historical saga. Lee Smith: Fair and Tender Ladies, a novel. Sherri S. Tepper, sciencefiction and fantasy writer: The Gate to Women's Country. Anne Tyler: Breathing Lessons, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel. Diana Velez: Reclaiming Medusa: Short Stories by Contemporary Puerto Rican Women. Alma Luz Villanueva: The Ultraviolet Sky. Diane Wakoski: Emerald Ice: Selected Poems 196287. Wendy Wasserstein: The Heidi Chronicles, first female author to win a Tony Award for Best
CONTEXTS 1988
Gertrude Elion, research scientist and the first woman elected to the National Inventors Hall of Fame, receives the Nobel Prize in Medicine along with her longtime research partner, George Hitchings. Women cast 10 million more ballots than men in the presidential election; George Bush wins.
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Play, she also receives a Pulitzer Prize for drama.
1988
Phyllis A. Whitney, author of many gothic and romantic suspense novels, is named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America. Mitsuye Yamada: Desert Run: Poems and Stories. Hisaye Yamamoto: Seventeen Syllables and Other Stones. Wakako Yamauchi: The Trip, a play.
1989
Paula Gunn Allen: Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and Contemporary Writing by Native American Women. Dorothy Allison: Trash, stories. Mary Catherine Bateson: Composing a Life, biography. Bebe Moore Campbell: Sweet Summer: Growing Up with and without My Dad, a memoir. Jill Churchill: Crime and Punishment, winner of an Agatha Award.
1989
The Berlin Wall begins to come down. Fourteen women university students are killed at the University of Montreal by a man shouting "You're all f—ing feminists!" A pro-choice march in Washington, D.C., draws some 300,000 to 500,000 people. Only one-third of women consider themselves feminists. Webster v. Reproductive Health Services returns to states the authority to
Women Writers in the United States * 411 TEXTS
1989
Cheryl Clarke: Humid Pitch: Narrative Poetry. Jill Ker Conway, Australian-born emigree to the U.S., historian and memoirist: The Road from Coorain, describing her childhood in the Australian outback. J. California Cooper: Homemade Love, winner of the American Book Award. Lucha Corpi: Delia's Song, a novel. Annie Dillard: The Writing Life, memoir. Rita Dove: The Yellow House on the Comer, poetry. Katherine Dunn: Geek Love, a novel. Alicia Caspar de Alba, Chicana poet and shortstory writer: Beggar on the Cordoba Bridge, poetry. Kaye Gibbons: A Virtuous Woman, a novel. Ellen Gilchrist: Light Can Be Both Wave and Panicle, stories, and The Anna Papers, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1989
limit a woman's right to a legal abortion. A New York Times poll of women finds job discrimination "the most important problem facing women today." A Gallup poll finds that 55 percent of women versus 31 percent of men say that they are the ones who wanted a divorce; 20 percent say both wanted it. Stowe v. Davis rules that life begins at conception and awards frozen embryos of a divorcing couple to the wife, Mary Sue Stowe; an appeals court reverses this decision and awards joint custody. A Florida woman addicted to cocaine, though she had sought (and been denied) treatment for her addiction, is found guilty of "transmitting prohibited drugs to a minor" —her fetus. African American Barbara Harris becomes the first woman bishop of the U.S. Episcopal Church. That a "Yuppie" female jogger is raped and beaten
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1989
Kimiko Hahn, Japanese American poet: Air Pocket. Irene Beltran Hernandez, Chicana novelist: Across the Great River. Joyce Johnson: In the Night Cafe, a novel. Cynthia Kadohata, Japanese American novelist: The Floating World. Barbara Kingsolver: Holding the Line: Women in the Great Arizona Mine Strike of 1983. Maxine Hong Kingston: The Tripmaster Monkey, a novel. Natalie Kusz: Road Song, memoir. Onnie Lee Logan with Katherine Clark: Motherwit: An Alabama Midwife's Story, a memoir of Logan's experiences as a domestic servant and midwife in Alabama from 1931 to 1984. Shirley Lim: Modern Secrets, poetry. Terry McMillan: Disappearing Acts, a novel.
1989
in Central Park by a group of "wilding" black youths becomes a major national news story. Total daily circulation of the country's 1687 newspapers is 63,263,000. Deborah Norville replaces Jane Pauley as co-host of the "Today Show." Only eight out of 100 of the most frequently seen television correspondents are women, down from 15 the previous year. Jazz pianist and saxophonist Billy Tipton dies at 75, leaving behind a wife and three adopted sons. It was only at "his" death that it was revealed that "Billy" was actually a "she." A congressional committee reports only a 9 percent "take-home baby" success rate for in vitro fertilization clinics. The Food and Drug Administration bans importation of RU 486-"the abortion pill" —for private use. U.S. troops invade Panama.
Women Writers in the United States * 413
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1989
Nancy Mairs: Remembering the Bone House: An Erotics of Place and Space, essays. Making Waves, an Anthology of Writings by and About Asian American Women, edited by Asian Women United of California.
Susan Minot, novelist and short-story writer: Lust and Other Stories. Bharati Mukherjee: Jasmine, a novel. Judith Ortiz Gofer, Puerto Rican-born poet, novelist, and memoirist: The Line of the Sun, a novel. Marge Piercy: Summer People, a novel. Mary Helen Ponce: The Wedding, a novel. Gilda Radner (19461989), comedienne and autobiographer: It's Always Something, about her battle with cancer. Susan Fromberg Schaeffer: Buffalo Afternoon, a novel.
CONTEXTS
1989
Whoopi Goldberg becomes the second African American woman to win an Oscar when she wins as Best Supporting Actress for Ghost. Singer Tina Turner receives three Grammy awards for her album Private Dancer.
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Sarah Schulman: After Delores, a novel.
1989
Mary Lee Settle: Charley Bland, a novel. Lee Smith: Me and My Baby View the Eclipse, short stories. Susan Sontag: AIDS and Its Metaphors. LaVyrle Spencer, popular romance novelist: The Fulfillment and Morning Glory. Suleri, Indian American novelist: Meatless Days, a novel. Amy Tan, Chinese American novelist: The Joy Luck Club, a novel. Panla Vogel: And Baby Makes Seven, a play about lesbian parenting. Alice Walker: The Temple of My Familiar, a novel. Celeste West: The Lesbian Love Advisor. 1990s
1990s
An estimated one out of two marriages end in divorce; studies show that women's standard of living declines 73 percent and men's rises 42 per-
Women Writers in the United States 4 415 TEXTS
CONTEXTS 1990s
1990s
cent on average after divorce. Twenty-one percent of women report physical abuse by male partners; over 3 million women are assaulted by a partner every year. Estimates suggest as many as one in three women are raped. The cosmetic industry does $17.5 billion worth of business in the U.S. annually.
1990
Susie Bright: Susie Sexpert's Lesbian Sex World. Rita Mae Brown, popular novelist, with Wish You Were Here begins a series of mysteries co-written with her cat, Sneaky Pie Brown. Elena Castedo, Spanishborn novelist: Paradise. Amy Clampitt, poet: Westward. Michelle Cliff: Bodies of Water. Wanda Coleman: African Sleeping Sickness: Stories Poems.
1990
African American dancer and choreographer Judith Jamison becomes director of the Alvin Alley Dance Company. Women direct 20 out of 406 feature films; between the years 1940 and 1980, women directed only 14 feature films total. Dr. Antonia Coella Novello becomes the first woman and first Hispanic in the position of Surgeon General of the U.S. Outspoken Democrat Ann Richards wins election as governor of Texas.
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1990
Patricia Cornwell introduces her Dr. Kay Scarpetta, M.E., mystery series with Postmortem. Praised for the attention to details of forensic evidence (Cornwell worked for several years as a computer analyst in the office of the chief medical examiner of Virginia), Postmortem wins several awards for best first novel of the year, including the Edgar, die Macavity, the Creasey, and the Anthony.
1990
Sharon Pratt Dixon becomes the first black woman to be elected mayor of a major U.S. city (Washington, D.C.). Women hold 25 seats (4.7 percent) in the U.S Congress; 23 are in the House of Representatives and 2 in the Senate. Only 18 percent of the 13 million governmenthandled child support payments are collected.
Lucha Corpi: Variadones sobre una tempestad/ Variations on the Storm, poetry.
The Act for Better Child Care (ABC) becomes law, enacting comprehensive child care legislation.
Mary Crow Dog: Lakota Woman, autobiography.
Twenty-six women imprisoned for killing or assaulting their batterers are pardoned by Governor Richard Celeste in Ohio.
Carol Emshwiller, science-fiction writer: Carmen Dog. Louise Gliick: Ararat, poetry. Marilyn Hacker: Going Back to the River, a collection of poetry. Jessica Hagedorn: The Dog Eaters, a novel. Joy Harjo: In Mad Love and War, poetry.
Surrogate mother Anna Johnson loses her court plea for custody of the child she carried for Mark (who donated the sperm) and Christina Calvert (who donated the egg). The court's decision affirms genetics as the main criterion for parenthood. With the appointment of Justice Sandra
Women Writers in the United States * 417 TEXTS 1990
A Brighter Coming Day: A Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Reader, Frances Smith Foster, ed. Alice Hoffman: Seventh Heaven, a novel. Linda Hogan, Chickasaw author: Mean Spirit, a novel about the displacement of the Osage people when oil was discovered on their lands in the 1920s. Jamaica Kincaid: Lucy, a novel. Barbara Kingsolver: Animal Dreams, a novel. Alice Koller: The Stations of Solitude, philosophical memoir. Ursula K. Le Guin: Tehanu, which revisits the world created in her earlier Earthsea creations. Nancy Mairs: Carnal Acts, personal essays. Lee Maracle, Native American (Metis people) author, poet, scholar, and activist: Bobbie Lee: Indian Rebel. Colleen McElroy: What Madness Brought Me Here:
CONTEXTS 1990
Gardebring, the Minnesota Supreme Court becomes the first to seat a majority of women. In Houston, Mayor Kathy Whitmire appoints Elizabeth M. Watson chief of police. She is the first to so serve in one of the nation's 20 largest cities. Lorna Simpson, known for works that juxtapose photographs and text, becomes the first African American woman granted a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. A record 3.1 million women hold two jobs at once. After ceasing circulation for over a year, Ms. magazine is reissued with no advertisements. A bomb planted under Earth First! activist Judi Barri's car explodes, crippling her and injuring her passenger and fellow activist, Darryl Cherney. The U.S. Post Office issues a stamp commemorating poet Marianne Moore.
418 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1990
New and Selected Poems,
1968-1988. Tina McElroy Ansa, African American novelist: Baby of the Family. Sue Miller: Family Pictures, a novel. Kate Millett: The LoonyBin Trip, autobiography. Joyce Carol Gates: Because It Is Bitter and Because It Is My Heart and I Lock My Door upon Myself, novels. Judith Ortiz Gofer: Silent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood, personal essays. Minnie Bruce Pratt: Crime against Nature, a poetry cycle about losing custody of her child after coming out as a lesbian. Anne Rice: The Witching Hour, the first in the Mayfair Witches series. Dori Sanders, African American novelist: Clover: A Novel. Kate Simon: Etchings in an Hourglass, memoir.
CONTEXTS 1990
Women Writers in the United States * 419 TEXTS 1990
Linda Ching Sledge, Chinese American novelist: Empire of Heaven.
CONTEXTS
1990
Laurel Thatcher Ulrich: A Mid-wife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812, winner of the Pultizer Prize for history. Mona Van Duyn: Near Changes, Pulitzer Prizewinning volume of poetry. Michele Wallace: Invisibility Blues. 1990-1991
1991
Ai: Fate, poetry.
Meena Alexander: Nampally Road, a novel. Julia Alvarez: How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, a novel. Gloria Anzaldua: Making Faces, Making Soul/Haciendo caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives by Feminists of Color. Kay Boyle: The Collected Poems.
1990-1991
Communist governments collapse throughout Eastern Europe and Russia.
1991
Women earn 70 cents for every dollar a man makes; 1.5 times more women begin businesses than men. Some 41.7 percent of the adult population is single. Although 80 to 85 percent of custodial parents are mothers, when fathers fight for custody they win 70 percent of the time. The first class-action sexual harassment suit is filed before a Minnesota court on behalf of a group of
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1991
Lorene Gary: Black Ice, a memoir. Lorna Dee Gervantes: From the Cables of Genocide: Poems on Love and Hunger. Sandra Cisneros: Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories. Lucille Clifton: Quilting: Poems 1981-1990. Elizabeth Cox, southern novelist: The Ragged Way People Vail Out of Love. Lillian Eaderman: Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America. Susan Faludi: Backlash: The Undeclared War against American Women. Zelda Fitzgerald (18991948): The Collected Writings of Zelda Fitzgerald, published posthumously. Mary Gaitskill: Two Girls, Fat and Thin, a novel. Gail Godwin: Father Melancholy 's Daughter, a novel.
1991
female miners at the Eveleth Taconite Gompany. Clarence Thomas is appointed to the Supreme Court despite allegations of sexual harassment by law professor and former EEOC colleague Anita Hill. The Supreme Court rules in Rust v. Sullivan that the government can prevent federally funded clinics from even mentioning abortion when counseling pregnant women; the decision is soon referred to as "the gag rule." Norplant, a contraceptive device consisting of rods implanted under the skin for up to 3 to 5 years, is approved for use in the U.S. Bernadette Healy becomes the first woman director of the National Institutes of Health. She promises to end the "Ice Age" of medical response to women's health needs and launches the Women's Health Initiative, a 15-year, $600 million study, emphasizing research on osteoporosis, cancer, and heart disease.
Women Writers in the United States * 421 CONTEXTS
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1991
Jewelle Gomez: The Gilda Stories, a lesbian vampire tale. Jorie Graham: Region of Unlikeness, poetry. Katharine Hepburn, actress, feminist: Me: Stories of My Life. Molly Ivins, political satirist: Molly Ivins Can't Say That, Can She?, bestselling humor. Gish Jen, Chinese American novelist: Typical American. Gloria Kaufman edits In Stitches: A Patchwork of Feminist Humor and Satire. Paule Marshall: Daughters, a novel. Linda Pastan: Heroes in Disguise, poetry.
1991
In International Union v. Johnson Controls, the Supreme Court decision finds a fetal-protection plan at the Johnson Controls plant violates the 1978 Pregnancy Discrimination Act; the victory is double-edged since it allows fertile women to work in the plant's highrisk, high-paying jobs. A California judge sentences a woman convicted of child abuse to have contraceptive rods — Norplant —inserted. A judge rules that the Virginia Military Institute can remain an all-male institution, claiming that all-male schools insure educational diversity and citing the importance of bonding rituals.
Letty Cottin Pogrebin, Jewish American autobiographer, feminist, and longtime contributor to Ms.: Deborah, Golda, and Me.
Women receive almost as many law degrees as do men; however, women lawyers earn only 75 cents for every dollar made by their male counterparts, down from 89 cents for every dollar in 1983.
Yvonne Sapia, Puerto Rican fiction writer: Valentino 's Hair.
The National Women of Color Association is formed.
Marge Piercy: He, She, and It, a novel.
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1991
Gail Sheehy: The Silent Passage: Menopause. Bapsi Sidwa, South Asian American writer: Cracking India. Leslie Marmon Silko: The Almanac of the Dead, a novel. Jane Smiley: A Thousand Acres, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and the National Book Critics' Circle Award. May Swenson: The Love Poems of May Swenson, published posthumously. Amy Tan: The Kitchen God's Wife, a novel. Anne Tyler: Saint Maybe, a novel. Patricia J. Williams: The Alchemy of Race and Rights: Diary of a Law Professor. Naomi Wolf: The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty Are Used Against Women.
1991
Eleven percent of all university presidents are women. Three of the 1000 Chief Executive Officers of Fortune 1000 companies are women. A Ms. magazine survey finds that 73 percent of women limit the places they go alone due to fear of attack. World Women's Conference for a Healthy Planet is held in Miami. Pearl E. Primus, dancer, choreographer, anthropologist, and authority on African dance, is awarded the National Medal of Arts, the highest honor given by the NEA. Performance artist Anna Deavere Smith receives acclaim for her Fires in the Mirror: Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Martha Mayer Erlebacher, a painter influenced by the Old Masters, exhibits Fate Comes. Barbara Brandon's Where Pm Coming From becomes the first syndicated comic
Women Writers in the United States * 423 TEXTS 1991
CONTEXTS 1991
strip by an African American woman cartoonist. Jodie Foster wins her second Academy Award for Best Actress, for her portrayal of FBI cadet Clarice Starling in Silence of the Lambs. Flight attendants at American Airlines win a lawsuit forcing the company to drop strict weight rules; that same year, a Continental Airlines employee is rehired after filing a lawsuit against the company that fired her for not wearing make up. Arlette Rafferty Schweitzer becomes the first woman to give birth to her own grandchildren; she carries the twins for her daughter. Sarah Eileen Williamson becomes the first girl ever elected mayor of the Reverend Edward J. Flanagan's Boys Town. On the eve of the Persian Gulf war, a 2 5 percent gender gap reflects that more men than women support military intervention. A survey for McCall's shows 84 percent of re-
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1991
1991
spondents approve of combat duty for women.
1991-1992
1991-1992
By the end of the Persian Gulf war, 13 U.S. women soldiers have been killed and two taken prisoner.
1992
Women represent twothirds of all poor American adults; more than 80 percent of all full-time working women earn less than $20,000 a year, and the gender-based pay gap is worse in America than in any other country in the developed world.
1992
Dorothy Allison: Bastard Out of Carolina, a novel. Rosellen Brown: Before and After, suspense novel. Bebe Moore Campbell: Your Blues Ain't Like Mine, a novel. Blanche Wiesen Cook: Eleanor Roosevelt, a biography. Mary Daly: Outercourse: The Be-Dazzling Voyage: Containing Recollections from My Logbook of a Radical Feminist Philosopher. Annie Dillard: The Living, a novel. Rita Dove: Through the Ivory Gate, a novel. Marian Wright Edelman, African American activist and founder of the Children's Defense Fund: The Measure of Our Success: A Letter to My Children and Yours.
Seventy percent of all wives outlive their husbands. An estimated 2.9 million children are reported to child protective service agencies for suspected abuse, up about 213,000 since 1991; confirmed deaths from child abuse total an estimated 1,261, with 84 percent of fatalities occurring among children under age five and 43 percent under age one. Women hold only 4.5 percent of all seats on the boards of Fortune 500 companies.
Women Writers in the United States * 425 TEXTS
1992
M.F.K. Fisher: To Begin Again: Stones and Memoirs, 1908-1929. Cristina Garcia, Cubanborn novelist: Dreaming in Cuban. Pam Houston: Cowboys Are My Weakness, short stories about women living in the traditionally male-oriented West. Cynthia Kadohata: In the Heart of the Valley of Love. Denise Levertov: Evening Train, her 21st collection of poems. Mary McCarthy: Intellectual Memories, posthumously published autobiography. Jill McCorkle: Crash Diet, short stories. Terry McMillan: Waiting to Exhale, a novel. Toni McNaron: / Dwell in Possibility, a memoir. Margaret Maron, mystery author, publishes Bootlegger's Daughter, the first in a series focusing on Deborah Knott, judge and sleuth. The novel virtually
CONTEXTS
1992
Over 500,000 women "March for Women's Lives" in Washington, D.C. In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Supreme Court affirms the constitutionality of abortion but allows individual states to place restrictions that do not unduly burden the woman. Cesarean sections and hysterectomies are the third and sixth, respectively, most common surgical procedures in the U.S. Dow Corning withdraws its silicone breast implants from the market after the FDA and the media question their safety. An estimated 1.4 million women have had breast cancer, with an estimated 175,000 diagnosed each year. Of the approximately 1 million Americans infected with the HIV virus, 10 percent are women. Among teens, the figure is 25 percent. AIDS is the fifth leading killer of women 25 to 44 years of age.
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sweeps the mystery awards for 1993, winning an Edgar, an Anthony, an Agatha, and a MacAvity. Toni Morrison: Jazz, a novel; Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination, an analysis of the presence of African Americans in the American literary imagination; and, as editor, Race-ing Justice, En-gendering Power: Essays on Anita Hill, Clarence 'Thomas, and the Construction of Social Reality. Gloria Naylor: Bailey's Cafe, a novel. Barbara Neely: Blanche on the Earn begins a mystery series with African American cleaning woman Blanche White as sleuth. The New Our Bodies, Our Selves, revised and updated for the 1990s. Joyce Carol Gates: Black Water, a novel. Sharon Olds: The Father, poetry. Grace Paley: New and Collected Poems.
1992
After a long guardianship battle, the Minnesota Court of Appeals rules that Sharon Kowalski, brain-damaged in a 1983 car crash, can go home with her lover, Karen Thompson. William Kennedy Smith, nephew of Senator Ted Kennedy, is acquitted of rape charges stemming from an incident at the Kennedys' Palm Beach estate; the trial is televised and watched by millions of viewers. Boxer Mike Tyson is convicted of raping a beauty pageant contestant and sentenced to up to ten years in jail. The U.S. Navy investigates allegations that, at its annual Tailhook Association conference, 26 women were sexually harassed. In 1994 former Navy Lieutenant Paula Coughlin is awarded $6.7 million in damages. A jury acquits Los Angeles police officers of beating Rodney King; the verdict sparks riots throughout the city.
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Severna Park: Speaking Dreams, a lesbian sciencefiction novel. Marge Piercy: Mars and Her Children, poetry. Patricia Preciado Martin: Songs My Mother Sang to Me: An Oral History of Mexican American Women. Anna Quindlen, Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper columnist and novelist: Object Lessons, a novel. Lee Smith: The Devil's Dream, a novel. Susan Sontag: The Volcano Lover, a novel. Gloria Steinem: Revolution from Within: A Book of Self-Esteem. Susan Straight: / Been in Sorrow's Kitchen and Licked Out All the Pots, a novel. Donna Tartt: The Secret History, a best-selling novel. Carol Tavris, social psychologist, lecturer, and writer: The Mis-measure of Woman: Why Women Are Not the Better Sex, the Infe-
CONTEXTS
1992
Five female Stroh's Brewery employees sue the company for sexual harassment stemming from Stroh's advertisements featuring a "Swedish Bikini Team." The diet industry earns $30.2 billion annually. Leona Bentsen unsuccessfully challenges the Supreme Court decision forbidding the importation of RU 486 ("abortion") pills into the U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle links the L.A. riots and television character Murphy Brown's single motherhood, claiming both to be signs of the nation's lack of "family values." Bill Clinton defeats George Bush in the presidential election; his wife Hillary Rodham Clinton becomes the first presidential spouse to hold a professional degree. Of 106 women who run for the House of Representatives, 47 win seats; 5 of the 11 female Senate candidates win seats.
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rior Sex, or the Opposite Sex. Alma Lux, Villanueva: Naked Ladies. Alice Walker: Possessing the Secret of Joy, a novel about female genital mutilation, sparks debate and controversy over the practice. Anna Lee Walters: Talking Indian: Reflections on Survival and Writing. Marianne Williamson, lecturer and writer in spiritual psychotherapy: A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of a Course in Miracles. Carol Wrightman: Writing Dangerously: Maty McCarthy and Her World, a National Book Awardwinning biography.
1992
Carol Moseley Braun wins Senate election in Illinois and becomes the country's first African American woman senator. California becomes the first state to elect two women, Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, to fill its two Senate seats. North Carolina elects Eva Clayton to Congress, making her the first African American representative elected in the state since 1901 and its first woman of color; Clayton is elected president of the freshman congressional class. Mae Jemison, who became the first African American woman astronaut in 1987, participates in a NASA shuttle mission on the space shuttle Endeavor, where she serves as a mission specialist, responsible for conducting various experiments during the flights. Take Our Daughters to Work Day is inaugurated. By 1994, approximately 25 to 30 million adults have participated. Colonel Margarethe Cammermeyer is discharged
Women Writers in the United States * 429 TEXTS 1992
CONTEXTS 1992
from the Washington state National Guard after acknowledging that she is a lesbian. In 1994, a U.S. district court judge orders her reinstatement. The Independent Women's Forum is founded by and for hardcore conservative professional women. Colorado passes Amendment 2, which prohibits local governments from protecting gays and lesbians from discrimination. It is declared unconstitutional in 1994 by the Colorado State Supreme Court. Holly Hughes, lesbian performance artist, receives an NEA grant, denied two years earlier. Callie Khouri receives an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for Thelma and Louise, a female buddy movie starring Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis, who were both nominated for Best Actress awards. Julie Dash is the first black woman writer and director to make a nation-
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]992
1993
The Sleeper Wakes: Harlem Renaissance Stories by Women, Marcy Knopf, ed. On January 20, Maya Angelou reads "On the Pulse of the Morning" at the presidential inauguration of Bill Clinton. Angelou is the first woman and the first African American to do so. Marilou Awiakta: Selu: Seeking the Com Mother's Wisdom, described by Awiaktu as "seedthoughts for the twenty-first century." E. M. Broner: The Telling: The Story of a Group of Jewish Women Who Journey to Spirituality through Community and Ceremony. Rita Mae Brown: Venus Envy, a novel. Ana Castillo: So Far from. God, a novel. Mary Crow Dog: Ohitka Woman, a sequel to the autobiographical bestseller Lakota Woman. Sarah L. Delaney and A. Elizabeth Delaney (1891-
1992
ally distributed feature film, Daughters of the Dust.
1993
The Vietnam Women's Memorial Project opens in Washington, D.C. The seven-foot tall sculpture, done by Glenna Goodacre, honors the American women who served in the war. Lyn St. James becomes the second woman to qualify to race in the Indianapolis 500. President Clinton appoints Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Supreme Court, making her the second woman ever to sit on the bench and making this the first time in history when two women so serve. President Clinton appoints Miami district attorney Janet Reno as the first woman U.S. Attorney General; previous nominees Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood had stumbled over "Nannygate," a failure to pay social security taxes for domestic employees that did not prevent the appointment of male nominees to cabinet posts who also failed to pay.
Women Writers in the United States * 431 TEXTS
1993
1995), with Amy Hill Hearth: Having Our Say: The Delaney Sisters' First 100 Years, based on the stories of two African American sisters who were born in the postReconstruction South and lived in Harlem during its renaissance. Rita Dove is named Poet Laureate. The Selected Letters of Mary Moody Emerson, Nancy Craig Simmons, ed., demonstrates the strong intellectual influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson's aunt on her nephew. M.F.K. Fisher: Stay Me, Oh Comfort Me: Journals and Stories, 1933-1941. Jan Freeman, poet: Hyena. Betty Friedan: The Fountain of Age, a nonfictional work on menopause. Kaye Gibbons: Charms for the Easy Life, a novel. Brett Harvey: The Fifties: A Women's Oral History. Susanna Kaysen: Girl, Interrupted, an autobiographical memoir about being
CONTEXTS
1993
Acknowledging that women can react differently to drugs than do men and thus that some recommended dosages may have been in error, the FDA ends a 16-year ban on including women in drug safety tests. Ellen V. Futter, president of Barnard College at age 31, becomes president of the American Museum of Natural History and the first woman to head a major New York City museum. Judith Rodin becomes the first female president of an Ivy League school when she is appointed president of the University of Pennsylvania. By this date, two-thirds of all books sold are paperbacks.
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committed to a psychiatric ward as a teenager. Barbara Kingsolver: Pigs in Heaven, a novel. Audre Lorde: The Marvelous Arithmetics of Distance, Poems 1981-1992, posthumously published. Wilma Mankiller: Mankiller: A Chief and Her People, an autobiography written with Michael Wallis. Bobbie Ann Mason: Feather Crowns, a novel. Sue Miller: For Love, a novel. Cherrie Moraga: The Last Generation. Toni Morrison is awarded the Nobel Prize for literature. Bharati Mukherjee: The Holder of the World, a novel. Fae Myenne Ng: Bone, a novel. Kathleen Norris: Dakota: A Spiritual Geography. Joyce Carol Oates: Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1993
Women Writers in the United States * 433 TEXTS 1993
E. Annie Proulx: The Shipping News, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel. Jewell Parker Rhodes: Voodoo Dreams: A Novel of Marie Laveau. Adrienne Rich: What Is Found There: Notebooks on Poetry and Politics. Kate Roiphe: The Morning After: Sex, Fear, and Feminism, on Campus. Dori Sanders: Her Own Place, a novel. The Power of Her Sympathy: The Autobiography and Journal of Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Mary Kelley, ed. Elizabeth Marshall Thomas: The Hidden Life of Dogs. Helena Maria Viramontes: Paris Rats in E.L.A., short stories. Bailey White: Mama Makes Up Her Mind, and Other Dangers of Southern Living, humorous essays. Naomi Wolf: Fire with Fire: The New Female Power and How It Will Change the 21st Century.
CONTEXTS 1993
434 * Women Writers in the United States TEXTS 1994
Dorothy Allison: Skin: Talking About Sex, Class, and Literature, essays. Jtilia Alvarez: In the Time of the Butterflies, a novel. Maya Angelou: Wouldn't Take Nothing for My Journey Now, autobiography. Doris Betts: Souls Raised from the Dead, a novel. Ruthie Bolton: Gal, a True Life. J. California Cooper: In Search of Satisfaction, a novel. Susan J. Douglas: Where the Girls Are: Growing Up Female with the Mass Media. Louise Erdrich: The Bingo Palace, the concluding novel in Erdrich's fourvolume series tracing the interconnecting lives of several Native American families. Carolyn Forche: The Angel of History, poetry. Nikki Giovanni: Racism 101, essays. Gail Godwin: The Good Husband, a novel.
CONTEXTS 1994
Barbra Streisand goes on concert tour for the first time in 27 years; a record number of fans pay uiiprecedented prices to see the show. Actress Roseanne sparks debate when she kisses another woman, Mariel Hemingway, on her television show. Paula Jones files suit against President Bill Clinton, accusing him of sexual harassment. After football and media star O. J. Simpson is accused of the stabbing death of his wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, calls to domestic violence hotlines reportedly increase greatly. The pretrial hearing is one of the most-watched television events of the century, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis dies from cancer at age 64. Czech-born and openly lesbian U.S. tennis player Martina Navratilova retires from singles play after one of the most successful sports careers on record: she has played for
Women Writers in the United States TEXTS
1994
Doris Kearns Goodwin: No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II, Pulitzer Prizewinning history. Shirlee Taylor Haizlip: The Sweeter the Juice: A Family Memoir in Black and White, detailing the author's experiences tracing the black and the white branches of her family. Jane Hamilton, novelist: A Map of the World. Joan Hedrick: Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life, winner of Pulitzer Prize for biography. Alice Hoffman: Second Nature, a novel. Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz: The Power and Passion ofM. Carey Thomas, a biography of a founding dean and second president of Bryn Mawr and a leading figure in higher education for women in the early 20th century. Virginia Kelley, mother of President Bill Clinton: Leading with My Heart: My Life, with James Mor-
435
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1994
20 years, garnered 167 titles, and earned over $20 million. She continues to play doubles and mixed doubles and in 1995 wins a Wimbledon mixed doubles title, giving her 19 Wimbledon titles, just one short of the record held by Billie Jean King. Speed skater Bonnie Blair becomes the first woman in history to win five Olympic gold medals. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders is asked to resign after stating publicly that she believes school children should be taught about masturbation as part of general sex education. A joint Working Mother/ Gallup poll reveals that roughly 75 percent of mothers employed outside the home are greatly satisfied with both work and family. Of the 20 MacArthur Fellowships awarded this year, seven go to women. New York becomes the second state after Florida to rule against defendants' claiming that the way a
436 + Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1994
gan. She passes away later in the year. Norma McCorvey, with Andy Meisler, publishes an account of her life and her struggles at the forefront of the abortion debate: / Am Roe. Sharyn McCrumb: She Walks These Hills, a novel about Appalachia. Nancy Mairs: Voice Lessons: On Becoming a (Woman) Writer, essays. Anchee Min: Red Azalea, an autobiography about growing up in China during Mao's Cultural Revolution . Mario Morgan: Mutant Message Down Under, a fictional account of a woman traveling the outback with Aborigines in Australia.
1994
woman dresses is a defense for sexually assaulting her. An Esquire poll reports that of 1000 women between the ages of 18 and 25, 65 percent would prefer winning a Pulitzer Prize to a Miss America crown, 57 percent would rather be Hillary Rodham Clinton than Princess Di, and, if only having one child, 54 percent would prefer a daughter to a son. The largest settlement in a sexual harassment case —$7.1 million —is awarded to Rena Weeks, a former secretary at the world's largest law firm. The amount is later reduced.
Susan Power, Native American novelist: The Grass Dancer.
The Academy Award for Best Short Documentary is awarded to Defending Our Lives, a film focusing on women imprisoned for killing their batterers. Since the film's release, several of the women featured have had their sentences commuted or have been granted early parole.
Anna Quindlen: One True Thing, a novel.
Roberta Cooper Ramo becomes the first woman
Joyce Carol Gates: What I Lived For, a novel.
Women Writers in the United States * 431 TEXTS 1994
With the publication of the third in the Mayflower Series, Taltos, and the release of the movie version of Interview with the Vampire and tie-in reprints of the novels in the Vampire Chronicles series, Anne Rice has four novels on the bestseller lists. May Sarton: Encore: A Journal of the Eightieth Year. Sarah Schulman: My American History: Lesbian and Gay Life During the Reagan/Bush Years. Mab Segrest, lesbian essayist and civil rights activist: Memoir of a Race Traitor. Linda Gray Sexton: Searching for Mercy Street: My Journey Back to My Mother, Anne Sexton. Ntozake Shange: Liliane: Resurrection of the Daughter, a novel. Carol Shields, novelist: The Stone Diaries, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for best novel in 1995; in 1993, when it was first published in London, it
CONTEXTS 1994
elected president of the American Bar Association, which has been in existence since 1878. Women own more than 6.5 million businesses in the United States. Twelve-year-old Vicki Van Meter, who in 1993 became the youngest female to fly a plane across the U.S., becomes the youngest female to fly a plane across the Atlantic Ocean.
438 * Women Writers in the United States CONTEXTS
TEXTS
1994
was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
1994
Anna Deavere Smith: Twilight: Los Angeles 1992, based on her one-woman show about the L.A. riots. LaVyrle Spencer: Family Blessings, romance novel. Gloria Steinem: Moving Beyond Words: Age, Rage, Sex, Power, Money, Muscles: Breaking the Boundaries of Gender. Dorothy West, the last surviving member of the Harlem Renaissance, publishes her first novel in several decades: The Wedding. Marguerite Young: Inviting the Muses: Collected Stories and Essays. The Oxford Companion to Women's Writing in the United States, Cathy N. Davidson and Linda Wagner-Martin, eds. 2000
2000
The world's population is projected to reach an estimated 6.3 billion.
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Allen, Paula Gunn. The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the feminine in American Indian Traditions. Boston: Beacon, 1986. "Almanac." Life. May 1994, pp. 37-44. Alter, Judy, and A. T. Row, eds. Unbridled Spirits: Short Fiction about Women in the Old West. Fort Worth: Texas Christian Univ. Press, 1994. Augenbraum, Harold, and Ilan Stavans. Growing Up Latino: Memoirs and Stories. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1993. Ballantine, Betty, and Ian Ballantine. The Native Americans: An Illustrated History. Atlanta: Turner Publishing, 1993. Barclay, Donald A., James H. Maguire, and Peter Wild. Into the Wilderness Dream: Exploration Narratives of the American West, 1500-1805. Salt Lake City: Univ. of Utah Press, 1994. Bardes, Barbara, and Suzanne Gossett. Declarations of Independence: Women and Political Power in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction. New Brunswick: Rutgers Univ. Press, 1990. Barlow, Judith E., ed. Plays by American Women, 1930-1960. New York: Applause, 1994. Bataille, Gretchen, ed. Native American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland, 1993. , and Kathleen Mullen Sands. American Indian Women: Telling Their Lives. Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska Press, 1984. Baym, Nina. Woman's Fiction: A Guide to Novels by and about Women in America, 1820-1870. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1978. Blain, Virginia, Isobel Grundy, and Patricia Clements, eds. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1990. Blair, Walter. Native American Humor. New York: Harper & Row, 1960. Braude, Ann. Radical Spirits: Spiritualism and Women's Rights in Nineteenth-Century America. Boston: Beacon, 1989. Brown, Dorothy H., and Barbara C. Ewell. Louisiana Women Writers: New Essays and a Comprehensive Bibliography. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Press, 1992. Bufwack, Mary A., and Robert K. Oermann. Finding Her Voice: The Saga of Women in Country Music. New York: Crown, 1993. Buhle, Mary Jo, and Paul Buhle, eds. The Concise History of Woman Suffrage: Selections
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442 * Works Consulted Haight, Anne L. Banned Books: 381 B.C. to 1918 A.D. 4th ed., updated and enlarged by Chandler B. Grannis. New York: R.R. Bowker, 1978. Harris, Ann Sutherland, and Linda Nochlin. Women Artists, 1550-1950. New York: Knopf, 1984. Harris, Barbara J. Beyond Her Sphere: Women and the Professions in American History. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1978. Hart, Jamie, and Elsa Barkley Brown, comps., with assistance from N. H. Goodall. Black Women in the United States: A Chronology. In Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, ed. Darlene Clark Hinc. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Carlson, 1993. Pp. 1309-18. Harvey, Brett. The Fifties: A Women's Oral History. New York: HarperPerennial, 1993. Hatch, Jane M., ed. The American Book oj Days. 3d ed. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1978. Hong, Maria, ed. Growing Up Asian American: An Anthology. New York: William Morrow, 1993. Howe, Florence. No More Masks!: An Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Wom.cn Poets. New York: HarperPerennial, 1993. Jensen, Malcolm C. America in Time: America's History Year by Year through Texts and Pictures. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977. Johnson, David E. From Day to Day: A Calendar of Notable Birthdays and Events. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow, 1990. Johnson, Deidrc. Edward Stratemeyer and the Stratemeyer Syndicate. New York: Twayne, 1993. Jones, Jacqueline. Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow: Black Women, Work and the Family, from Slavery to the Present. New York: Vintage, 1985. Kelley, Mary, ed. The Power of Her Sympathy: The Autobiography and Journal of Catharine Maria Sedgwick. Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1993. Kirn, Elaine H. Asian American Literature: An Introduction to the Writings and Their Social Context. Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press, 1982. Knopf, Marcy. The Sleeper Wakes: Harlem Renaissance Stories by Wom,en. New Brunswick: Rutgers Univ. Press, 1993. Kolodny, Annette. The Land Before Her: Fantasy and Experience of the American Frontiers, 1630-1860. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1984. . The Lay of the Land: Metaphor as Experience and History in American Life and Letters. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1975. Kroeger, Brooke. Nellie Ely: Daredevil, Reporter, Feminist. New York: New York Times, 1994. hauler, Paul, ed. Reconstructing American Literature: Courses, Syllabi, Issues. New York: Feminist Press, 1983. , gen. ed. The Heath Anthology of American Literature, vols. 1 and 2. 2nd ed. Lexington, Mass.: D. C. Heath, 1994. Lim, Shirley Geok-lin, and Amy Ling. Reading the Literatures of Asian America. Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press, 1992. Ling, Amy. Between Worlds: Women Writers of Chinese Ancestry. New York: Pergamon Press, 1990. Lopez, Tiffany Ana, ed. Growing Up Chicana/o: An Anthology. New York: William Morrow, 1993.
Works Consulted * 443 Lucie-Smith, Edward. American Realism. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1994. Macdonald, Anne L. Feminine Ingenuity: How Women Inventors Changed America. New York: Ballantine Books, 1992. . No Idle Hands: The Social History of American Knitting. New York: Ballantine, 1988. Malloy, William. The Mystery Book of Days. New York: Mysterious Press, 1990. Manning, Carol S. "The Real Beginning of the Southern Renaissance." In The Female Tradition in Southern Literature, ed. Carol S. Manning. Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press, 1993. Matthews, Glenna. The Rise of Public Woman: Woman's Power and Woman's Place in the United States, 1630-1970. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1992. Moers, Ellen. Literary Women: The Great Writers. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1976. Moraga, Cherrie, and Gloria Aiizaldua. This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. 2nd ed. New York: Kitchen Table, 1983. Morantz-Sanchez, Regina Markell. Sympathy and Science: Women Physicians in American Medicine. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1985. Morgan, Robin, ed. Sisterhood Is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement. New York: Vintage, 1970. Moynihan, Ruth Barnes, Cynthia Russett, and Laurie Crumpacker, eds. Second to None: A Documentary History of American Women. Vol. 1: From the 16th Century to 1865. Vol. 2: From 1865 to the Present. Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska Press, 1993. Munro, Eleanor. Originals: American Women Artists. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1979. The News and Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) 1992-1994. Newton, Sarah E. Learning to Behave: A Guide to American Conduct Books Before 1900. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1994. Nichols, Victoria, and Susan Thompson. Silk Stalkings: When Women Write of Murder. Berkeley: Black Lizard Books, 1988. "1994 in Review." Ms. 5, no. 4 (Jan./Feb. 1995): 46-53. Norton, Mary Beth. Liberty's Daughters: The Revolutionary Experience of American Women, 1150-1800. Boston: Little, Brown, 1980. "100 American Women Who Made a Difference." Women's History: Celebrating Women's History Month 1,1 (1995, special collector's issue). Ousby, Ian, ed. The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1993. Padilla, Genaro M. My History, Not Yours: The Formation of Mexican American Autobiography. Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1993. Parini, Jay, ed. The Columbia History of American Poetry. New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1993. Pattee, Fred Lewis. The Feminine Fifties. New York: Appleton-Century, 1940. Patterson, James, and Peter Kim. The Day America Told the Truth. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1991. Pearlman, Mickey, and Katherine Usher Henderson. A Voice of One's Own: Conversations with America's Writing Women. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1990. Perkins, George, Barbara Perkins, and Phillip Leininger, eds. Bene't's Reader's Encyclopedia of American Literature. New York: HarperCollins, 1991.
444 * Works Consulted Poey, Delia, and Virgil Suarez. Iguana Dreams: New Latino Fiction. New York: HarperPerennial, 1992. Read, Phyllis J., and Bernard L. Witlieb. The Book of Women's Firsts: Breakthrough Achievements of Almost 1,000 American Women. New York: Random House, 1992. Rennolds, Margaret B., ed. National Museum of Women in the Arts. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1987. Riley, Clcnda. Inventing the American Woman: A Perspective on Woman's History, 1865 to the Present. Arlington Heights, 111. Harlan Davidson, 1986. Riley, Patricia. Growing Up Native American: An Anthology. New York: William Morrow, 1993. Robbins, Trina. A Century of Women Cartoonists. Northampton, Mass.: Kitchen Sink Press, 1993. Robertson, Patrick. The Book of Firsts. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1974. Root, Wavcrley, and Richard de Rochement. Eating in America: A History. New York: William Morrow, 1976. Rose, Phyllis. The Norton Book of Women's Lives. New York: Norton, 1993. Rosenberg, Rosalind. Beyond Separate Spheres: Intellectual Roots of Modern Feminism.. New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1982. Rossi, Alice S., ed. The Feminist Papers: From Adams to de Beauvoir. New York: Bantam, 1973. Rossiter, Margaret W. Women Scientists in America: Struggles and Strategies to 1940. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1982. Rothblum, Esther D., and Kathleen A. Brehony. Boston Marriages: Romantic but Asexual Relationships among Contemporary Lesbians. Amherst: Univ. of Massachusetts Press, 1993. Rubin, Louis D., Jr., Blyden Jackson, Rayburn S. Moore, Lewis P. Simpson, and Thomas Daniel Young. The History of Southern Literature. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Press, 1985. Russ, Joanna. How to Suppress Women's Writing. Austin: Univ. of Texas Press, 1983. Russell, Sandi. Render Me My Song: African-American Women Writers from Slavery to the Present. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990. Ryan, Mary P. Women in Public: Between Banners and Ballots, 1825-1880. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1990. Schlisscl, Lillian. Women's Diaries of the Westward Journey. New York: Schocken Books, 1982. Schncir, Miriam, ed. Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings. 1972. Reprint. New York: Vintage, 1994. , ed. Feminism in Our Time: The Essential Writings, World War II to the Present. New York: Vintage, 1994. Scott, Bonnie Kime. The Gender of Modernism: A Critical Anthology. Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Press, 1990. Sgrignoli, Tonice. 365 Days of Women Calendar. Workman Publishing, 1994. Shockley, Ann Allen. Afro-American Women Writers, 1746-1933: An Anthology and Critical Guide. New York: New American Library, 1989. Showalter, Elaine, Lea Baechler, and A. Walton Litz, eds. Modern American Women
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I N D E X
Abbott, Edith, 180T, 186T, 213C Abbott, Grace, 270T, 279T Abbott, Shirley, 38 IT Abel, Annie Heloise, 193T, 205T, 225T Abolitionism, 12C, 17C, 22C, 27C, 28C, 30C, 35C, 50C, 51C, 52C, 5556C, 56C, 57C, 58C, 62C, 71C, 84C, 91C, 97C, 101C antislavery writing. See African Americans; Nonfiction, antislavery writing; Nonfiction, slave narratives newspapers,47C, 50C, 68C, 81T See also African Americans; Racism; Slavery Abortion, 4C, 36C, 58C, 95C, 197C, 261C, 263-64C, 273C, 275C, 318C, 329T, 334C, 341C, 344C, 355C, 361C, 368C, 372C, 387C, 399C, 401C, 407C, 410C, 410-11C, 412C, 420C, 425C, 427C, 43 6T anti-abortion, 95C, 368C, 372C, 387C, 398C, 401C, 407C, 410-11C, 412C, 420C See also Contraception; Pregnancy Abuse. See Children; Domestic
Violence; Rape; Sexual Assault Abzug, Bella, 335C Acker, Kathy, 345T, 359T, 38IT, 387T, 397T, 406T Ackerman, Paula, 292C Activism. See specific causes Actresses, 67T, 112T, 155C, 157C, 163C, 175C, 181C, 183C, 186C, 187C, 194C, 195C, 231C, 231-32C, 234C, 237C, 240C, 247C, 247T, 249C, 252C, 256C, 265C, 277C, 278C, 281C, 283C, 285C,288-89C, 28990C, 298C, 299C, 312C, 313C, 317T, 327C, 328C, 329C, 345C, 382C, 383C, 384T, 404C, 42 IT, 42 3 C, 42 9C See also Film; Radio; Television Adams, Abigail, 23T, 26-27C Adams, Alice, 320T, 345T, 367T, 387T Adams, Annette Abbott, 203C Adams, Elizabeth, 62 C Adams, Hannah, 29T, 38T, 39T Adams, Harriet Stratemeyer, 240-41T Adams, John, 34C, 35C Adams, John Quincy, 44C, 59-60C
Adams, Leonie, 233T Adams, Maude, 157C Adams, Sarah Flower, 54T Adams, Sharon Sites, 329C Addams, Jane, HOC, 17879T, 180T, 184T, 194C, 197T, 217T, 238T, 241C Adler, Polly, 223C Adoption. See Children Adventurers, 120C, 132C, 133C, 139T, HOC, 166C, 178C, 190C See also Explorers Advertising, 142C, 148C, 160C, 162C, 192C, 196C, 213C, 216C, 219C, 231C, 232C, 282C Advice Books. See Nonfiction The Advocate, 5 5T Aebi, Tania, 393C AFDC. See Government, benefits Afghanistan, 366C, 408C Africa, 124C, 209C African Americans, 7C, 40C, 42C, 50-51C, 51C, 55T, 75T, 75C, 77C, 91C, 92C, 95C, 100C, 103C, 109C, 114C, 119C, 122C, 123-24C, 124T, 125C, 125-26C, 129-30C, 133-34C, 134T, 135C, HOT, 143C, 143-44T, 14950T, IS IT, 152C,
448 * Index
1S6C, 157C, 162C, 169C, 182C, 183C, 19IT, 197C, 201202C, 207C, 207T, 2 IOC, 210T, 214T, 218C, 222C, 227C, 230C, 235C, 237C, 244C, 24SC;, 261C, 262C, 263C, 264T, 26S-66C, 266C, 268T, 270C, 275T, 285C, 286C, 289-90C, 290C, 291-92C, 294C, 299C, 300C, 303C, 305C, 306T. 307T, 311C, 312C, 313C, 317C, 318C, 320C, 323C, 326C, 326T, 330C, 33 IT, 332T, 333T, 335T, 336C, 340C, 343C, 350C, 352C, 353C, 354C, 356C, 361C, 364C, 388-89C, 399C, 406T, 408C, 411C, 413C, 415C, 415-16C, 417C, 422C, 422-23C, 424T, 428C, 42 8T, 429-30C, 4303 IT, 434T, 435T organizations, 50C, 50S1C, 85C, 104C, 111C, 143C, 151T, 151-52C, 154C, 163C, 172C, 174C, 177C, 180C, 186-87C, 196-97C, 198C, 201C, 208209C, 215C, 218C, 254C, 262-63C, 274C, 287-88C, 297C, 302303C, 320C, 323C, 326C, 336C, 343C See also NAACP population. See Population publications, 47C, 50C, 68C, 8IT, 15 IT, 174T, 209-10T, 280C, 334C schools, 30C, 53C, 78C, 81-82C, 104C, 127C, HOC, 1S7C, 170C, 186-87C writing, 19T, 25T, 27T, 59T, 63T, 64T, 67T,
74-75T, 82T, 93T, 107T, 13 IT, 141C, 143T, 146T, 149T, 15 IT, 152T, 158T, 159T, 16 IT, 162T, 166T, 167T, 168T, 172T, 175T, 178T, 18 IT, 18 IT, 182T, 184T, 185T, 187T, 188T, 189T, 192T, 203T, 204T, 206T, 21 IT, 212T, 215T, 21ST, 218T, 219T, 220T, 222T, 223C, 225T, 229T, 230T, 23IT, 235T, 241T, 242T, 242T, 244T, 248T, 282T, 283T, 285T, 287T, 295T, 299T, 305T, 322T, 325T, 326T, 328T, 334T, 337T, 339T, 340T, 341T, 342T, 343T, 344T, 345T, 346T, 349T, 352T, 353T, 354T, 356T, 357T, 361T, 363T, 364T, 366T, 367T, 367T, 368T, 368T, 369T, 369T, 370T, 372T, 374T, 375T, 376T, 378T, 379T, 38IT, 382T, 383T, 384T, 384-85T, 386T, 387T, 388T, 389T, 390T, 391T, 391-92T, 392T, 394T, 395T, 396T, 398T, 399T, 40IT, 402T, 403T, 405T, 407T, 408T, 410T, 41 IT, 412T, 414T, 41ST, 419T, 420T, 42 IT, 434T, 42 5T, 42 6T, 42 8T, 430T, 430-3 IT, 432T, 43 3T, 437T, 438T Sec also Civil Rights; Racism; Slavery Africans population, 4C, 6C See also African Americans; Slavery
Aging, 83T, 123T, 129-30T, 239C, 267C, 284C 284C, 304C, 311C, 348C, 350C, 376C, 424C Ahern, Mary Eileen, 154T Ai(poet), 340T, 397T, 419T AIDS. See Illness Ailey, Alvin, 41SC Air Force. See Military Airplanes, 169C, 179-80C, 240C, 275C, 423C, 437C See also Pilots Akins, Zoe, 205T, 2 SOT Alarm, 132T Alaska native rights, 280C Albert, Mrs. Octavia Rogers, 142T Alcott, Abby, 75C Alcott, Bronson, 54C Alcott, Louisa May, 97C, 100T, 105T, 112T, 113T, 115T, 118T, 119T, 122T, 134T "A. M. Barnard," 98-99T, 348T Alcott, William, 85C Aldrich, Bess Streeter, 230T Aldrich, Mildred, 205T Aldrin, Buzz, 329C Alexander, Hattie Elizabeth, 316C Alexander, Meena, 356T, 419T Alexander, William, 27C Allen, Florence, 251C Allen, Grade, 245C, 291C Allen, Maria F,., 137C Allen, Paula Gunn, 376T, 38IT, 397-98T, 406T, 410T Allison, Dorothy, 410T, 424T, 434T Alta, 328T Alther, Lisa, 348T, 372T Alvarez, Julia, 419T, 434T Alvarez, Lynne, 381-82T, 387T American Civil Liberties Union, 212C
Index American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 270T American Ladies' Magazine, 58T American Literature, 42-43C, 44C, 62C, 113T anthologies, 48C, 84C, 139C, 171T, 391-92T criticism and histories, 84C, 195C, 203C, 222C, 286C, 292T, 302T, 317T, 355-56T, 408T, 43 8T See also Nonfiction, anthologies American Magazine, 3 0-31C, 120C The American Mercury, 224C American Museum Magazine, 31C American Revolution. See Wars American Whig Review, 61C Ames, Fanny Baker, 115-16C Ames, Jessie Daniel, 240C Ames, Lois, 358T Anarchism, 185T, 193C, 193T Anchor Books, 296C Anderson, Eugenie Moore, 287C Anderson, Laurie, 383C Anderson, Margaret, 191T, 201T, 215C Anderson, Marian, 225C, 265-66C,301T Anderson, Mary, 212C Anderson, Violette N., 227C Andrews, Eliza, 119T, 177T Andrews, Jane, 96T Andrus, Ethel Percy, 284C, 304C Angelou, Maya, 33IT, 398T, 430T, 434T Angle, Helen M., 180T Animals, 184C, 236C, 433T animal rights, 130C birds, 260T Anorexia. See Eating Disorders Ansa, Tina McElroy, 418T Anthologies. See American Literature; Nonfiction, anthologies
Anthony, Susan B., 99C, 105106C, 107T, 108C, 113C, 119C, 127C, 128T, 1S8T, 162-63C, 284T, 326T dollar, 364-45C Anthropology, 170T, 200T, 225C, 232T, 248T, 251T, 290T, 290T, 345T, 351T, 37ST Anti-Imperialism. See Imperialism, antiimperialism Antin, Mary, 159T, 186T, 191T Antioch College, 78C, 79C Antislavery. See Abolitionism Antislavery Writing. See Abolitionism, publications; Nonfiction, antislavery writing Antiwar. See War, antiwar Anzaldua, Gloria, 382T, 401T, 419T Appleton and Co., 51C Arbor House, 374C Arbus, Diane Nemerov, 32425C Archaeology, 266C Architecture, 108C, 149C, 190C, 208C, 286C, 316T organizations, 144C preservation, 80C Arden, Elizabeth. See Graham, Florence Nightingale Arendt, Hannah, 292T, 303T, 313T, 331T Armstrong, Anne L., 335C Armstrong, Charlotte, 273T Armstrong, Neil, 329C Army. See Military, army Arnaz, Desi, 292C Arnold, Eleanor, 143T Arnow, Harriette, 257T, 287T, 297T, 307T, 313T Arnstein, Margaret, 335C Art Historians. See Historians, art historians Arthur, Chester A., 128C
* 449
Arthur's Home Magazine, 79C Artists, 27C, 109C, 182C, 189C, 270C, 274C, 383-84C, 417C illustrators, 182C, 188C magazines, 150-51C miniaturists, 41C multimedia, 340C, 348C, 364T, 369C, 393T organizations, 159C, 170C, 226C, 229-30C painters, 15C, 45C, 72C, 126C, 137C, 141T, 146C, 149C, 150C, 152C, 170C, 174C, 177C, 209-iOC, 22930C, 245C, 250C, 254-55C, 267C, 271C, 277-78C, 287C, 290C, 293C, 294C, 298C, 300C, 303T, 308C, 314-15C, 333-34C, 341C, 422C performance artists, 383C, 429C potters, 266C schools, 65C, 106C, 152C sculptors, 24-25C, 92C, 218C, 259-60C, 270C, 313C, 353-54C, 380T Arzner, Dorothy, 235C, 267C Ashbridge, Elizabeth Sampson, 25T Asia, 199C Asian Americans, 134-35C, 352C, 367C organizations, 382C writing, 232T, 384T, 406T, 413T, 422T See also Burmese Americans; Chinese Americans; Japanese Americans; Korean Americans; Filipinas Aspinall, Nan Jane, 184C Assassinations, 101 -102 C, 128C, 255C, 314C, 318C, 326C, 327C See also Executions; Murders Astor, Mrs. William Waldorf, 178C
450 * Index Astronauts, 3 IOC, 303C, 329C, 382C, 388C, 42 8C Challenger, 398C Astronomy, 75-76C, 118C, 184C, 239-40C AT&T, 342C Athas, Daphne, 335T Athenaeum, 146C Atheneum Publishers, 304C Atherton, Gertrude, 147T, 156T, I59T, 166T, 199C, 251C Atkinson, Eudora Clark, 122C Atlanta Constitution, 106C Atlantic Monthly, 89C, 96T, 123T, 129T, 16 IT, 183C, 246T Auden, W. H, 293T Auel, Jean M., 367T Auerbach, Beatrice Fox, 262C "Aunt Sally," 90T Austen, Alice, 142C Austin, Ann, 9C Austin, Doris Jean, 401T Austin, Mary, 168T, 170T, 173T, 179T, 186T, 244T Australia, 167C, 436T writing, 41 IT Austria, 204C Autobiographies. See Nonfiction, autobiographies Automobiles, 150C, 168C, 178C, 179C, 180C, 180T, 208C, 212-13C, 233C, 239C race car drivers, 160C, 353C, 430C See also Transportation Avon Books, 270C Avon Press, 374C Awards Academy Award, 230C, 240C, 247C, 252C, 259C, 259T, 261-62C, 26SC, 277C, 289-90C, 298C, 299C, 328C, 345C, 354C, 369C, 382C, 404C, 413C, 423C, 429C, 436C
Agatha Award, 410T, 42526T American Book Award, 369T, 379T, 381T, 391T, 411T Anthony Award, 416T, 425-26T Award of Merit Medal for Poetry, 307T Balrog Award, 360T Bollingen Prize, 293T Booker Prize, 437-38T Chevalier of French Legion of Honor, 170C Comstoek Prize, 316C Congressional Medal of Honor, 103C Creasey Award, 416T Edgar Award, 282T, 416T, 425-26T George Washington Carver Memorial Award, 282T Gold Medal for Drama, 308T Grammy Award, 413 C Guggenheim, 283C Harvard's Boylston Prize, 121T Houghton Mifflin Poetry Award, 28IT Human Rights Prize, 311C International Woman's Year Award, 354C Kafka Prize, 361T, 361T Kesselring Award, 381-82T Lifetime Achievement Award, 355C MacArthur Foundation Award, 37ST, 435C Macavity Award, 416T, 425-26T McGraw-Hill Fiction Award, 309T Medal of Honor, 357C National Book Award, 292T, 293T, 302303T, 31ST, 328T, 329T, 334T, 338-39T, 342T, 343T, 346T, 354T, 357T, 363T, 379T, 389T, 42 8T National Book Critics Circle Award, 353T,
357T, 358T, 384T, 388T, 422T National Medal of the Arts, 42 2 C National Poetry Series Award, 379T Newbery Prize, 311-12T New York Drama Critics Circle Award, 270T, 289-90C, 30ST, 308T New York Times Outstanding Book of the Year, 343'F Nobel Peace Prize, 241 C, 282C, 315C Nobel Prize, 184C, 240C, 254T, 284C, 357C, 383C, 409C, 432T O. Henry Award, 223T, 310T Puerto del Sol Fiction Award, 398T Pulitzer Prize, 200T, 21 IT, 212T, 217T, 22 IT, 222T, 223T, 226T, 227-28T, 238T, 241T, 242T, 248T, 2SOT, 252T, 253T, 257-58T, 261T, 262T, 269T, 270T, 27IT, 277-78T, 284T, 287T, 289T, 292-93T, 293T, 301T, 305T, 308T, 312-13T, 316T, 318T, 321T, 330T, 336C, 336T, 338T, 340T, 349T, 361T, 374T, 379-80T, 38 IT, 38ST, 389T, 390T, 393T, 399T, 403T, 409T, 409--10T, 419T, 42 2T, 42 7T, 43 3T, 43 5T, 43 6C, 437-38T Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, 403T Rockefeller Public Service Award, 335C Sedgwick Memorial Medal, 335C Spingarn Medal, 218C Tony Award, 409-10T
Index Winthrop Ames Prize, 192T Woman of the Year Award, 282C, 326-27C Yale Series of Younger Poets Award, 25ST, 275T, 293T, 352T, 3 SOT Awiakta, Marilou, 359T, 430T Ayer, Harriet Hubbard, 136C Ayers, Mary, 54C Baezjoan, 304C, 32ST Bagley, Sarah, 66C Ba'hai. See Religion Baird, Zoe, 43 OC Baker, Ella, 297C Baker, Harriette Newell ("Mrs. Madeline Leslie"), 84T, 86T, 89T, 107T Baker, Josephine, 221C Baker, S.Josephine, 210T, 220T, 225T Balch, Emily Greene, 282C Baldwin, Faith, 214T Baldwin, Maria Louise, 140C Ball, Doris Bell Collier, 277T Ball, Lucille, 292C Baltasar, Silveria, 320T Baltimore Sun, 58C Bambara, Toni Cade, 319C, 337T, 356T, 367T Bancroft, Ann, 399C Banking, 349C Bannon, Ann, 302T, 304T, 307T, 31 IT Bantam Books, 281C Baptists. See Religion Bara, Theda, 194C Bard College, 3S2C Barfield, Clementine, 403 C Barker, "Ma," 236C Barkley, Frances Hornby, 30T Barnard, Kate, 175C Barnard College, 139C, 177C, 225C, 360C, 377C, 431C Barnes, Djuna, 207C, 2303IT, 257T, 303T Barnes, Margaret Ayer, 241T Barney, Natalie, 254-55C
Barnum, P. T., 58C, 76C, 99C, 113C See also Entertainment Barrett, Janie, 143C Barri.Judi, 417C Barrie, James, 1S7C Barrow, Clyde, 252C Barrymore, Ethel, 231C, 238T Barsaloux, Elsa, 199T Barton, Clara, 128C Barton, Parthena Rood, 12 IT Basic, Count, 260C Bass, Charlotta Spears, 307T Bates, Daisy, 302-303C Bates, Katharine Lee, 15 IT Bateson, Gregory, 387T Bateson, Mary Catherine, 387T, 410T Battle, Effie T, 191T Battles. See Wars Baxter, Annie, 146C Bayes, Nora, 181C Baym, Nina, 355-56T Bay Psalm Book, 8C Beach, Amy Mary Cheney, 147C, 155C Beach, Sylvia, 207C, 304T Beadle, Erastus, 93 C See also Dime Novels Beals, Jessie Tarbox, 173C Beard, Mary Ritter, 179C, 241T, 281T Beasley, Delilah, 205T Beatles, The, 320C Beattie, Ann, 351T, 367T, 398T Beaumont, Florence, 322-23C Beauty, 99C, 1S3C, 178C, 192C, 196C, 219C, 266C, 283C, 317C, 324C, 422T hair, 183C, 213C, 282C See also Body and Flealth; Cosmetics Beauty Pageants, 217C, 326C, 388-89C, 426C, 436C Beauvoir, Simone de, 288C Beaux, Cecilia, 137C, 1S2C Becker, Elaine, 367T Beecher, Catharine, 44C, 48T, 55T, 57T, 62T, 67T,
457
73T, ITT, 78C, 84T, 112T, 117T Beecher, Henry Ward, 113C Beeman, Anna, 33T Beers, Fannie, 138T Belgium, 124C, 209C Bell, Alexander Graham, 120C Bell-Scott, Patricia, 376T Benedict, Ruth, 251T, 281T Bennett, Elizabeth Hog, 34T Bennett, Gertrude Barrows ("Frances Stevens"), 206T Bennett, Gwendolyn, 209-10T Benoit, Joan, 389C Benson, Sally, 270T, 273T Bentsen, Leona, 427C Berg, Gertrude ("Molly Goldberg"), 233T Bergonio, Gemma, 392T Bernard, Jessie, 25 IT Bernard, Luther Lee, 25IT Berryman, John, 405T Berssenbrugge, Mei-Mei, 335T, 382T Bestsellers, 35T, 39C, 56T, 74T, 75-76T, 79T, 8IT, 82T, 87T, 104T, 105T, 118T, 119T, 151-52C, 161-62T, 184-85C, 214T, 227T, 23IT, 245T, 257-58T, 265T, 279T, 286T, 293T, 294T, 301T, 322T, 362T, 368T, 369T, 375T, 386T, 396T, 414T, 430T, 43 7T Bethune, Joanna Graham, 41T Bethune, Louise Blanchard, 144C Bethune, Mary McLeod, 170C, 223C, 254C, 257-58C Bethune-Cookman College, 170C Better Homes and Gardens, 219C Betts, Doris, 297T, 337T, 372T, 434T Beverages, 135C, 298C, 347C cocktail, first, 27C
452 * Index Beverages (continued) tea, 16C See also Prohibition;
Temperance Bibb (Thompson), Eloise, 15 IT Bicycles, 122C, HIT, 148C, 153C, 155T, 156C Biographies. See Nonfiction, biographies Bird, Isabella, 161T Birney, Alice McLellan, 156C Birtha, Becky, 382T Birth Control. See Contraception Birth Control Review, 198T Bishop, Bridget, 13C Bishop, Elizabeth, 28IT, 301T, 328T, 382'!' Bishop, Isabel, 245C, 271C Blacbnon, Anita, 259T Blacks. See African Americans Blackwell, Alice Stone, 197T Blackwell, Antoinette Brown. See Brown (Blackwell), Antoinette Blackwell, Elizabeth, 71-72C, 81C, 91-92C Blaine, Nell, 277-78C Blair, Bonnie, 43 5C Blake, Lillie Devereux, 9IT, 119C Blake, Margaret Jane, 156T Blanch, Harriet Stanton, 175 76C Blank, Clair, 2 5 IT Blea, Irene, 367T Bleecker, Ann Eliza, 34T, 35T Blindness, 59T, 65T Bloomer, Amelia Jenks, 72C,
77C Blow, Susan E., 116C Blumejudy, 3 3 IT, 359T, 382T Bly, Nellie (Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman), 136T, 139T, HOC Bly, Robert, 397C Boardman, Mabel, 170C Boas, Eranz, 225C
Body and Health, 43C, 84T, 85G, 109C, 109G, 173C, 180C, 232-33C, 286C, 335T, 367C, 387T, 388C, 393C, 407C, 412T, 420C, 422T, 423C, 425C, 42 6T, 42 8T See also Beauty; Cosmetic Surgery; Diets; EatingDisorders; Illness; Pregnancy; Medicine Boesing, Martha, 3S1-52T Bogan, Louise, 220T, 233T, 270T, 292T, 297T, 325T, 370T, 393T Bolin, Jane Matilda, 266C Bolton, Ruthie, 434T Bolton, Sarah Knowles, 152T Bombeck, Erma, 352T, 382T Bonaparte, Mrs. Jerome Napoleon, 232C Bonner, Marita, 209-10T, 40 IT Bonnin, Gertrude Simmons (Zitkala-a), 16 IT, 165T, 214T, 227C Bono, Sonny, 317C Bookman, 151-52C Book-of-the-Month Club, 228C, 242T, 246T Bookselling. See Publishing Booth, Evangeline, 170C Boquist, Laura Brewster, 97T Borden, Gail, 87C Borden, Lizzie, 147C Bornstein-Samoza, Miriam, 352T Borzoi Quarterly, 321C Bosons, Reva Beck, 257C Boston Massacre, 23C Boston Tea Party, 25C Boston University, 121C, 402 C Bourke-White, Margaret, 258C, 274C, 313T Bow, Clara, 229C Bowdoin College, 165T Bowen, Catherine Drinker, 302-303T Bowers, Bathsheba, 1ST
Bowles, Jane, 275T, 295T Bowne, Eliza Southgate, 136-
37T Boxer, Barbara, 42 8C Boyd, Louise A., 300G Boyle, Kay, 241-42T, 244T, 25IT, 257T, 261T, 267T, 2 8 IT, 292T, 307T, 419T Bracken, Peg, 356T Bracket, Anna Callendar, 98C Bradford, Barbara Taylor, 364T Bradford, Elizabeth, 1ST Bradford, Sarah Elizabeth Hopkins, 107T Bradley, Marion Zimmer, 31ST, 376T Bradstreet, Anne Dudley, 910T, 11T Branch, Anna Hempstead, 233T Brandon, Barbara, 42 2-2 3 C Brant, Beth, 392T Braun, Carol Moseley, 428C Braverman, Kate, 364T Brazil, 84C Breckinridge, Sophonisba Preston, 104C, 186T, 25IT, 247-48T Brewer, Lucy, 39C Brewer, Maggie, 377C Brewster, Martha Wadsworth, 2 IT Brice, Fanny, 183C, 231C Briggs, Emily Edson, 73T, 129C Brigham, Emeline, 105C Bright, Susie, 41 5T Brigman, Anne W., 195C Brinkley, Nell, 2 IOC Brinson-Pineda, Barbara, 364T, 387T Broadwick, Georgia ("Tiny"), 190C Broker, Ignatia, 382T Broner, E. M., 359T, 43OT Brooks, Charlotte, 142T Brooks, Gwendolyn, 287T,
295T, 307T, 367T, 393C
Index Brooks, Maria, 42T, S2T, 58T Brooks, Romaine, 254-5SC Brooks, Van Wyck, 195C Broughton, Virginia W., 175T Broumas, Olga, 356T, 392T Brown, Alice M. , 152T, 1S9T, 170T, 192T, 21 IT Brown (Blackwell), Antoinette, 76C, 79C
Brown, Charles Brockden, 37C Brown, Charlotte Hawkins, 206T Brown, Hallie Quinn, 225T Brown, Helen Gurley, 31 IT, 320C Brown, John, 91C, 92 C Brown, Julia Prewitt, 402 C Brown, Linda, 297C, 387T Brown, Olympia, 94C Brown, Rita Mae, 32 3C, 332C, 340T, 377T, 398T, 406T, 415T, 43 OT Brown, Rosellen, 331-32T, 352T, 360T, 387T, 424T Brown, Sue M. Wilson, 225T Brown University, 145C Brownmiller, Susan, 348T Bryant, Anita, 353C Bryant, Louise, 203T Bryn Mawr College, 131C, 132-33C, 177C,217C, 280C, 360C, 435T Buchanan, James, 87C Buck, Pearl S, 242T, 254T Buckingham-Harper, Minnie, 229C Bulimia. See Eating Disorders Burgess, Maria Louise, 152T Burmese Americans writing, 384T Burnett, Carol, 321C Burnett, Frances Hodgson, 134T, 172T, 184T Burnham, Walter, 80C Burns, George, 245C, 291C Burns, Lucy, 189C, 197C Burr, Esther Edwards, 20T Burras, Anne, 5C
Burstyn, Ellen, 345C Burton, Annie L. Campbell, 179T Burton, Miss H., 117T Burwell, Letitia, 152T Bush, George, 409C, 427C Bush, Olivia Ward, 159T, 192T Businesses. See Employment Business Week Magazine, 349C Business Woman's Journal, HOT Butler, Octavia E., 364T, 367T, 401T Butterick, Ebenezer, 99C Butterick, Eleanor, 99C Butterworth, Mary, 16C Byrd, Sarah, 214C Byrne, Jane, 364C Cabarets. See Entertainment, Cabarets Cabot, J. Eliot, 68-69C Cabrini, Frances Xavier, 282C Calendars, 190C Calhoun, Frances Boyd, 179T Calkins, Mary Whiton, 172C Callahan, Sophia Alice, 145T Calvert, Christina, 416T Cambodia, 3 31C Cameron, Donaldina, 108C Campbell, Bebe Moore, 410T, 42 4T Campbell, Judy, 285T Camping, 108-109C Canada, 41 C, 204C Cancer. See Illness Candlelight Press, 274C Canfield, Dorothy, 242T. See also Fisher, Dorothy Canfield Cannon, Annie Jump, 23940C Captivity Narratives. See Nonfiction, captivity narratives Caraway, Hattie O. W., 246C Caribbean Americans writing, 394T, 417T Carmichael, Stokely, 31516C, 320C
455
Carnivals. See Entertainment, carnivals Carpenter, Esther Bernon, 137T Carpenter, Karen, 383C Carpenter, Margaret, 27677C Carrighar, Sally, 317T, 341T Carrington, Elaine Sterne, 244T Carrington, Margaret, 93T Carson, Rachel, 292T, 31 IT Carter, Jimmy, 353C Carter, "Mother" Maybelle, 229C Carrier, Xam Wilson, 40IT Carver, Mamie Jordan, 206T Gary, Alice, 77T, 78T, 79T, 91T, 101T, 105T, 112T Gary, Lorene, 420T Gary, Mary Ann Shadd, 8 IT, 8SC,129-30C Gary, Virgina Randolph, 47T Cashman, Nellie, 124-25C Caspary, Vera, 27ST, 279T, 295T, 307T, 364T Cassatt, Mary, 126C, 146C, 149C, 150C, 170C Castedo, Elena, 415T Castellano, Olivia, 368T, 398T Castillo, Ana, 348T, 398T, 43 OT Castro, Fidel, 304C Catacalos, Rosemary, 388T Catalogs. See Employment, retail and individual stores Catchpole, Judith, 9C Gather, Willa, 186T, 188T, 193T, 195-96C, 203T, 217T, 220T, 225T, 229T, 242T Catherwood, Mary, 89T Catholicism. See Religion Catholic Worker, 222T Catt, Carrie Chapman, 16263G, 191C, 220T Caulkins, Frances Manwaring, 49T, 66T
454 *
Index
Celeste, Richard, 416T Censorship, 113C, 159-60T, 190C, 198T, 201C, 221C, 227T, 228C, 234C, 244-45C, 251C, 263C, 279T, 289T, 294C Census. See Population Central Intelligence Agency. See Government, Central Intelligence Agency Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, 128C Cervantes, Irma, 377T Cervantes, Lorna Dee, 372T, 420T Cha, Theresa Hak Kyung, 377T Chambers, Jane, 345T, 368T Chambers, Robert, 398C Chandler, Elizabeth Margaret, 55-56T Chanel, Coco, 296C: Chang, Diana, 301T, 30ST, 309T, 313T, 345T, 360T, 377T Chang, Eileen, 299T, 322T Chang, Hsin-hai, 301T Chang, Louise Chia, 404C Channing, Elizabeth Parsons, 175T Chao, Evelina, 392T Chap-Book Magazine, 150-51 C Chaplin, Charlie, 186C Charles, Prince of Wales, 373C Charles I (king of England), 9C Charles II (king of England), 11C Charnas, Suzy McKee, 360T, 368T, 398T Chase, Mary Coyle, 277-78T Chautauqua Movement. See Education, Chautauqua Chavez, Denise, 398T Chen, Su Hua Ling, 295T Chen, Yuan-tsung, 368T Cheng, Nien, 398T Chennault, Anna, 31 IT, 368T Cher, 317C
Cherokee Rose Bud, 69T Cherney, Darryl, 417C Cherryh, C. J., 372T Chesebro', Caroline, 77T, 78T, 79T, 8IT, 84T, 86T, 99T, 100T, 10 IT, 112T Chesnut, Mary Boykin, 172T C:hi, Yuan-lin, 348T Chiang, Fay, 364T Chicago, Judy, 340C, 348T, 364T, 368T, 369C, 392-93T Chicago Sun-Times, 286C Chicago Tribune, 69C Chicanas, 185C, 261C, 369C, 415C writing, 132T, 192-93T, 234-3ST, 245T, 254T, 258T, 261T, 265T, 2 SOT, 284T, 337T, 341T, 343T, 346T, 348T, 349T, 350T, 35IT, 352T, 354T, 355T, 358T, 359T, 362T, 363T, 364T, 365T, 367T, 368T, 370T, 37 IT, 374T, 375T, 377T, 379T, 3SOT, 38IT, 381-82T, 385T, 386T, 387T, 388T, 389T, 390T, 393T, 394T, 395T, 397T, 398T, 400T, 40IT, 402T, 404T, 40 5T, 406T, 409T, 41 IT, 412T, 419T, 420T, 427T, 428T, 43 OT, 43 2T, 43 3T Chih, Ginger, 394T Child, Lydia Maria, 44T, 46T, 48T, 48T, 501', 52-53T, 55T, 56T, 84T, 104T, 1051', 122T Childbirth, 4C, 7C, 36C, 46C, 62C, 75C, 133C, 137C, 138C, 161C, 163C, 194C, 235T, 268C, 284C, 286T, 304C, 307C, 314C, 382C, 406C
See also Children; Infertility; Medicine; Midwifery; Pregnancy Children, HOC, 114C, 126C, 131C, 133C, 161T, 164C, 186T, 198C, 210T, 257-58C, 268C, 282C, 284C, 290C, 292C, 307C, 328-29C, 343C, 358C, 424T adoption, 74C, 204C child abuse, 421C, 424C child care, 191-92C, 281C, 372-73C, 372-73C, 416C child support, 387-88C, 406C, 416C, 416C Children's Bureau, 186C, 191-92C custody, 73C, 402C, 419C, 419C dolls, 188C, 291-92C kindergartens. See Education labor, 104C, 165C, 171C, 198C, 218C, 261C manuals, 130C, 135T, 165T, 225T nurseries. See Education organizations, 263C scout organizations, 183C, 186C Children's Literature, 47C, 47T, 48T, 49T, 5253T, 54T, 59T, 78T, 96T, 104T, 109-HOC, 118T, 122T, 123T, 125T, 128T, 134T, 154T, 168T, 169T, 172T, 184T, 188T, 189T, 199T, 208C, 219C, 223C, 232T, 239-40T, 246T, 247T, 284T, 285T, 311-12T, 315T, 315-16T, 331T, 366T, 37 IT, 386T, 399T illustrators, 250C magazines, 31C, 47T, 214T newspapers, 23IT Children's Magazine, 31C Childress, Alice, 299T, 398T
Index Child's Friend magazine, 47T Chilton, Mary, 6C Chin, Marilyn, 40IT China, 69C, 108C, 114C, 129C, 145C, 166-67C, 224C, 249T, 262T, 279C, 287C, 436T Chinese Americans , 95C, 108C, 277T, 308T, 31 IT, 322T, 331C, 39 IT population. See Population writing, 160T, 165-66T, 169T, 179T, 186T, 219T, 227T, 265T, 267T, 271T, 276T, 277T, 78T, 279T, 281T, 283T, 287T, 293T, 294T, 294-95T, 295T, 298T, 299T, 3 GOT, 30 IT, 302T, 304T, 305T, 306T, 309T, 312T, 313T, 315T, 316T, 317T, 318T, 323T, 325T, 326T, 329T, 330T, 335T, 336T, 339T, 340-41T, 342T, 345T, 348T, 349T, 35IT, 353T, 354T, 358T, 359T, 360T, 363T, 364T, 365T, 368T, 369T, 37 IT, 372T, 373T, 374T, 377T, 378T, 378T, 379T, 382T, 386T, 390T, 393T, 394T, 396T, 398T, 40IT, 408T, 412T, 414T, 419T, 42IT, 422T, 432T See also Asian Americans Chisholm, Shirley, 325C, 335C, 337C Chodorow, Nancy, 360T Cholera. See Illness Chona, 242T Chopin, Kate, 143T, 150T, 156T, 159-60T Choreography. See Dancers, choreography Chow, Diana, 372T Christian, Barbara, 391-92T
Christian Science. See Religion, Christian Science Chubbuck, Emily, 67T Chun, Jinsie K. S, 341T Church, Ellen, 240C Churchill, Jill, 410T Chute, Carolyn, 393T, 407T Cigarettes, 171C, 298C Circuses. See Entertainment, circuses Cisneros, Sandra, 368T, 388T, 402T, 420T Citizenship, 105C, 136C, 166-67T, 217C, 222C Civil Rights, 103C, 118C, 18ST, 270-71C, 279T, 281C, 297C, 299C, 302C, 307C, 309C, 313C, 315C, 316C, 320C, 326C, 326T, 326-27C, 331C, 406C See also African Americans; Racism Civil War. See Wars, Civil War Claflin, Tennessee, 113C Clampitt, Amy, 383T, 415T Clapp, Margaret, 284T Clark, CaroM, 162C Clark, Eleanor, 282T, 31ST Clark, Emily, 242T Clark, Georgia Neese, 287C Clark, Katherine, 412T Clark, Mary Higgins, 356T, 407T Clark, Mazie Earhart, 244T Clark, Sue Ainslie, 185-86T Clarke, Cheryl, 398T, 41 IT Clarke, Dr. Edward H., 115C, 117T Clarke, Mary Carr, 40T Clayton, Eva, 428C Claytor, Helen Natalie Jackson, 323C Cleveland, Grover, 132C, 217C Cliff, Michelle, 368T, 402T, 415T Clifford, Carrie Williams, 184T, 217T Clifford, Margaret Ellen, 243T
* 455
Clifton, Lucille, 328T, 338T, 345T, 352T, 402T, 42 OT Cline, Patsy, 308C Clinton, Bill, 427C, 43OT, 430C, 434C, 435-36T Clinton, Hillary Rodham, 427C, 436C Close, Glenn, 404C Clothing. See Fashion Clubs, Women's, 105C, 132C, 143C, 154C, 158T, 163C, 180T C. M. Clark Publishing Co, 162C Coast Guard. See Military, coast guard Cochran, Josephine G, 136C Cochrane, Elizabeth, 13637C Cochrane, Jacqueline, 274C Cody, William F. ("Buffalo Bill"), 130C, 132C Cohen, Rose, 203T Coit, Margaret Louise, 289T Coke, Sir Edward, 302-303T Colbert, Claudette, 237C Cole, Roberta, 115C Coleman, Anita Scott, 20910T, 285T, 309T Coleman, Bessie, 216-17C Coleman, Wanda, 356T, 415T College of William and Mary, 14C Colleges. See Education, colleges and universities Colley, Sarah Ophelia ("Minnie Pearl"), 26869C Collier's Magazine, 137C Colored American Magazine, 161T Colored Woman's Magazine, 174T Colson, Elizabeth, 345T Columbia University, 145C Columbus, Christopher, 3C Colver, Alice Mary Ross, 278T Colwin, Laurie, 349T, 360T Combe, George, 59C
456
Index
Comediennes, 93C, 155C, 186C, 240C, 245C, 256C, 268-69C, 291C, 292C, 321C, 350C, 370T, 393C, 413T, 43 4C Comfort Magazine, 131C Communism, 309-10C, 338C, 419C anticommunism, 206—207C, 212C McCarthy era, 261C, 275T, 284C, 291C, 294C, 297C writing, 131C, 204C, 244C, 25SC Composers. See Music, composers Computers, 279C, 295C Comstock, Ada, 215-16C Comstock, Anna Botsford, 184T Comstock, Anthony, 113C, 115C, 130C Comstock Law, 193-94C Confederacy, 102T, 193T United Daughters of, 150C See also Wars, Civil War Congress. See Government, Congress Connelly, Anna, 137C Conner, Charlotte Barnes, 65T Conservatism, 364C, 373C, 429C
See also Abortion, antiabortion; Communism, anticommunism; Feminism, antifeminism; Suffrage, anti-suffrage Consumers, 159-60C, 160C, 233C organizations, 145-46C Contraception, 4C, 27C, 76C, 105C, 115C, 182C, 193C, 193-94C, 194C, 197C, 198T, 204T, 215C, 220C, 236C, 236-37C, 239C, 2S7C, 259C, 261C, 262T, 263C, 263-64C, 273C, 275C, 300C, 308C,
317C, 332-33C, 333C, 343C, 383C, 411C, 412C, 421C See also Abortion Converse, H. M., 146C Conway, Jill Ker, 41 IT Cook, Blanche Weisen, 424T Cook, Fannie, 282T Cook, George Cram, 195C Cook, Joan, 342C Cookbooks. See Food, cookbooks Cooke, Rose Terry, 123T, 127T, 134T, 139T, 14ST Cooking Schools. See Food, cooking schools Coolidge, Calvin, 213C, 222C, 225C Cooper, Anna Julia, 147T, 1S7C Cooper, J. California, 388T, 402T, 41 IT, 434T Cooper, Jane, 325T, 388T Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 67T, 73T Cooper, Viola Irene, 233T Corbin, Caroline, 106T Corbin, Margaret, 26C Corbould, Elvina, 123T Cori, Dr. Gerty T, 284C Cornelisen, Ann, 328T, 352T, 368T, 383T Cornell, Sarah Maria, 53T Cornwell, Patricia, 416T Corpi, Lucha, 368T, 41 IT, 416T Corson, Juliet, 120C Cosmetics, 136C, 172C, 178C, 192C, 193C, 196C, 226C, 258C, 283C, 324C, 415C, 422T, 423C perfume, 199C, 34SC See also Beauty Cosmetic Surgery, 372C, 407C, 425C See also Body and Health Cosmopolitan Magazine, 136C, 320C, 373-74C Cota-Cardenas, Margarita, 349T, 393T
Cetera, Martha, 261C Coughlin, Paula, 42 6C Couzins, Phoebe, 119C Cox, Elizabeth, 42 OT Crabtree, Lotta, 93 C Craft, Christine, 389C Craig, Georgiana Ann Randolph ("Craig Rice"), 265-66T, 276T, 279T, 283T Crandall, Prudence, 53C Crane, Cheryl, 304C Crapsey, Adelaide, 193-94T Craven, Margaret, 34IT, 356T Crawford, Isabel Alice Hartley, 194T Crawford, Jane Todd, 39C Cressy, Earl Herbert, 29495T Crime, 8C, 16C, 29C, 38C, 60C, 237C, 252C, 316C, 326C, 407C, 411C, 411-12C, 417C, 42 6C, 43 6C See also Murders The Crisis, 209- 10T Criticism. See Nonfiction, criticism Crocker, Hannah Mather, 40T, 41T Croly, Jane Cunningham ("Jenny June"), 100T, 103C, 132T, 1S8T Cromwell, Oliver, 9C Cromwell, Otelia, 241T Crosby, Fanny, 65T Cross, Amanda. See Heilbrun, Carolyn Cross-dressing. See Genderbending Crothers, Rachel, 173T, 214T, 233T, 244T, 259T Crow Dog, Mary, 416T, 43 OT Crump, Diane, 329C, 334C Cuba, 84C, 167C, 174C, 304C, 3 IOC, 311C Cuban Americans writing, 376'F, 42 5T Cummings, Alma, 221C
Index Cummins, Maria Susanna, 8 IT, 89T, 89-90C, 93T, 100T Curb, Rosemary, 392T Curie, Marie, 184C Curtis, Louisa Knapp, 130C Custer, Elizabeth Bacon, 13233T Cusrer, General George, 120C Czechoslovakia, 204C, 265C, 327C Dailey, Janet, 368T, 372T, 383T, 402T Dall, Caroline Wells, 94T, 107T Daly, Mary, 325T, 341T, 360T, 42 4T Dancers, 221C, 227C, 229C, 237C, 264-65C, 305T, 340C, 415C, 422C ballet, 58C, 284C choreography, 227C, 237C, 282C, 314C marathons, 221C Dances, 163C, 193C, 225C, 264-65C, 277C, 312C, 317C Dandridge, Dorothy, 299C Daniel, Sadie lola, 242T Dare, Virginia, 4C Dargan, Olive Tilford ("Fielding Burke"), 244T, 254T Dash, Julie, 429-30C Dauser, Sue S., 278C Davenport, Kiana, 364T, 368T, 388T Davidson, Ann, 296C Davidson, Cathy N., 39192T, 43 8T Davidson, Lucretia Maria, 48T Davidson, Margaret Miller, 62T Davis, Angela, 338C, 372T Davis, Bette, 237C, 252C, 35SC Davis, Charity, 311C Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay, 248T Davis, Geena, 429C
Davis, {Catherine B., 234T, 236C Davis, Mary "Molly" Moore, 138-39T, 152T, 156T, 168T, 175T Davis, Paulina, SOT Davis, Rebecca Harding, 96T, 97T, 105T, 109C, 117T, 122T, 147T, 154T, 170T Day, Dorothy, 222T, 248C, 261T, 263T, 294T, 313T D. C. Heath & Co, 134C Deafness. See HearingImpaired Dean, Elizabeth, 263-64T Death, 101C, 111C, 127C, 321C, 329T, 373T See also Aging; Assassinations; Executions; Murders Deboiv's Review, 67'C Debs, Eugene, 165C Declaration of Independence, 26C De Hoyos, Angela, 349T, 365T, 394T Delacorte Press, 274-75C, 275C Deland, Margaret, 139T, 158T, 158T Delaney, A. Elizabeth, 4303 IT Delaney, Janice, 352T Delaney, Lucy A, 145T Delaney, Sarah L., 430-3 IT Delmar, Vina, 2 3 IT, 289T Deloria, Ella Cara, 244T, 407T De Mille, Agnes, 282C The Democratic Review, 58C Demorest's Monthly Magazine, 103C Denison, Mary Andrews, 68T, 89T, 90T, 91T, 94T, 100T Denmark, 235T, 248C Dennett, Mary Coffin (Ware), 194C Dennies, Joseph, 37C DePauw University, 111C
451
Depression, Great, 236C, 250C, 256C, 257-58C, 2S8C,278-79C Arts Project, 256-57C Federal Theatre Project, 254C,256-57C Federal Writers' Project, 2S6-S7C Public Works of Art Project, 250C Works Progress Administration, 25657C writing, 248T, 252T, 264T Deren, Maya, 283C Derricotte, Toi, 360T, 383T De Salvo, Albert, 324C Deutsch, Babette, 225T Devereaux, Jude, 369T The Dial, 60C, 62T, 68-69T, 126-27C, 222T, 226T Dial Press, 275C Diaries. See Nonfiction, diaries Diaz, Abby Morton, HOT Dick, Gladys Henry, 204C, 220C Dickens, Charles, 105C Dickinson, Anna, 94C, 119T Dickinson, Emily, 97T, 119T, 143T, 238T, 393T Didionjoan, 32ST, 335T, 356T, 36ST Didrikson (Zaharias), Mildred Ella ("Babe"). See Zaharias, Mildred Ella ("Babe") Didrikson Dietrich, Marlenc, 266C Diets, 8SC, 204T, 237C, 367C, 368C, 377C, 388C, 394C, 423C, 42 7 C See also Body and Health; Elating Disorders Dillard, Annie, 345T, 349T, 356T, 377T, 402T, 41 IT, 424T Dime Novels, 93C, 94T, 9495T, 95T, 97T, 14041T Dinnerstein, Dorothy, 35657T
458 * Index Disasters, 87C Discrimination. See Education, discrimination; Employment, discrimination; Government; Homosexuality; Military; Racism; Religion; Sexism; Sexual Harassment Divorce, 40C, 73C, 74C, 92C,
106C, 127C, 133C, 136C, 138C, 161C, 180C, 194C, 234T, 290C, 332C, 333C, 367C, 411C, 414-15C, 416C, 419C Dix, Dorothea, 104C Dixon, Sharon Pratt, 416C DobieJ. Frank, 245T, 254T Dock, Lavinia Lloyd, 176T Dodge, Mary Abigail ("Gail Hamilton"), 96T, 108T Dodge, Mary Mapes, 101T Doerr, Harriet, 360T Dole, Elizabeth, 382C Dolls. See Children, dolls Dolly Magazine, 408C Domestic Service. See Employment, domestic service Domestic Violence, 330C, 339C, 361C, 365C, 373C, 386C, 387C, 392C, 401C, 415C, 416C, 43 4C, 43 6C Dominican Americans, 419T, 434T Dominquez, Sylvia Maida, 341T Donald, Beulah Mae, 402 C Donlevy, Harriet Farley, 63T Donofrio, Beverly, 407T Donovan, Marion, 292C Dorr, Julia Caroline Ripley, 81-82T, 86T, 115T Dorr, Rheta Childe, 180-8IT Doubleday, 157C, 213C, 219C, 296C, 349C Douglas, Ann, 355-56T Douglas, Helen Mary (Gahagan), 278C
Douglas, Melvyn, 278C Douglas, Susan J., 434T Douglass, Frederick, 68C Dove, Rita, 369T, 399T, 411T, 424T, 43 IT Dover Publications, 275C Draper, Margaret Green, 20C Drayton, Grace, 188C Drinker, Elizabeth Sandwich, 2 IT
Drinks. See Beverages Drugs, 114C, 312C, 321C, 328-29C, 3S7-S8C, 407C, 407C, 411C,
431C Drumgoold, Kate, 158T Dubois, Sylvia, 129-30T DuBois, W.E.B., 162C, 172C Duerk, Alene, 340C Dunbar-Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore, 1S2T, 160T, 192T, 209-10T, 211T, 393T Duncan, Isadora, 229C Duncan, Thelma, 220T, 238T Dunham, Ethel Collins, 286T Dunham, Katherine, 237C, 305T, 314C Duniway, Abigail Scott, 9192T
Dunlap, Jane, 24T Dunn, Katherine, 335T, 41 IT Dunne, Irene, 237C Dunnigan, Alice, 286C Dupuy, Eliza Ann, 73T, 89T Duran, George, 218-19C Duston, Hannah, 14C Dutton, E.P., & Co., 79C Duyn, Mona Van, 334T Dworkin, Andrea, 372T Dye, Eva Emery, 25 IT Dyer, Mary, 11C Dykeman, Wilma, 31 IT, 320T, 341T Dykes, EvaB., 216C, 241T Dyslexia, 366T Eakins, Susan Hannah (MacDowell), 341C Earhart, Amelia, 259C F.arle, Alice Morse, 158T Eastman, Crystal, 189C
Eastman, Elaine Goodale, 127T Eastman, Linda A., 204205C Eating Disorders, 109C, 383C, 399-400C See also Body and Health; Diets Eaton, Edith Maud. See Far, Sui Sin Eaton, Winnifred. See Watanna, Onoto Eayres, Ellen Knowles, 207208C Eberhart, Mignon G., 234T, 25 IT, 332T Eberle, Mary Abastemia St. Leger, 174C Ebony Magazine, 280C Ecofeminism. See Feminism, ecofeminism; see also Environmentalism Economics, 158T, 170T credit, 205C, 343C, 346C currency, 30C economists, 282C financial panics, 115C millionaire, 64C See also Employment Eddy, Mary Baker, 118T, 119C, 177T, 326T Edelman, Marian Wright, 343C, 424T 'Ederle, Gertrude, 227C Edison, Thomas, 202-203C Editing. See Journalism; Publishing Education, 48T, 57T, 78T, 117T, 217C, 326C, 364C, 376-77C, 387C academies, 35C, 43-44C adult education, 117C art school, 65C Chautauqua, 117C colleges and universities, 7C, 14C, 53-54C, 5657C, 57-58C, 62C, 67C, 75C, 76C, 79C, 86C, 94C, 102C, 134C, 14SC, 162C, 165C, 165T, 177C, 191C, 268C, 358T, 360C,
Index 422C, 431C. See also individual institutions associations, 215-16C, 373C deans, 132C degrees, 333C graduate school, 110111C, 114C, 121C, 14SC, 132-33C, 178C, 213C, 216C organizations, 128C, 181C Phi Beta Kappa, 175C presidents, 112C professors, 78C, 15IT, 152C, 206C, 307C, 325C, 352C, 402C sororities, 105C, 111C students, 75C, 94C, HOC, 124C, 180C, 211-12C, 336C discrimination, 70C, 115C, 297C, 3 3 8C, 421C high schools, 44C, 161C, 268C kindergartens, 89C, 94C, 116C lyceums, 46C normal schools, 98C nurseries, 78C organizations, 78C, 181C, 284C principals, 98C scholarships, 356C schools, 30C, 54C, 114C seminaries, 39C, 43C, 44C, 57-S8C, 57-58C superintendents, 108C teachers, 53C, 56C, 78C, 156C, 182C, 225C, 284C, 284T organizations, 223C textbooks, 96T trade schools, 131-32C, 171C, 180-81C voting, 118C Edwards, E. S., 146C Edwards-Yearwood, Grace, 407T Ehrenreich, Barbara, 341T, 360T, 383T Ehrlich, Gretel, 393T, 407T
Eilberg, Amy, 392C Eisenhower, Dwight D., 296C,297C Eisenstein, Phyllis, 360T, 365T, 407T Eisman-Schier, Ruth, 326C El Salvador, 368C Elaw, Zilpha, 67T Elders, Joycelyn, 435C Eldridge, Elleanor, 59T, 63T Elgin, Suzette Hayden, 388T Elion, Gertrude, 409C Eliot, T. S., 19IT Elizabeth II (queen of England), 294C Ellet, Elizabeth E., 69-70T, 86T Elliot, Sarah Barnwell, 145T, 1S8T Elliott, L. Louise, 188T Elliott, Maud Howe, 2 DOT Ellis, Anne, 234T Ellis, Havelock, 156C Ellis, Pearl, 234-35T Ellis, Sophie Wenzel, 236T Elmendorf, Theresa West, 184C Embury, Emma Catherine, S9T Emerson, Mary Moody, 43 IT Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 6869C, 43 IT Emery, Sarah A., 123T Employment, 62T, 73C, 94T, HOC, 116T, 12SC, HOT, 146T, 169C, 180C, 184C, 18S-86T, 211C, 238C, 2S7C, 262C, 267C, 269C, 269-70C, 281C, 28889C, 307C, 311C, 323C, 331C, 341C, 342C, 343C, 34647C, 347C, 368C, 417C, 419-20C, 428C, 43 5C agencies, 7SC American Labor Party, 257C business, 16C, 17C, 18C, 78-79C, 175C, 183C, 202C, 211C, 225C,
* 459
401C, 422C, 424C, 43 7C organizations, 206C discrimination, 184C, 18586T, 270-71C, 296C, 313C, 315C, 332C, 342C, 349C, 387C, 389C, 398C, 402C, 411C, 421C domestic service, 109-HOC, 127C, 157T, 159C, 163C, 165T, 211C, 238C, 267C, 278-79C, 289C, 289C, 290C, 290C, 291C, 291C, 346C, 412T equity, 257C, 270C, 33 1C, 337C, 372-73C, 397C, 419C, 421C, 424C, 424C farming, 97-98C, 116T, 125C, 154-55T, 163C, 243T, 280C, 285C labor, 49C, 159-60C, 161C, 212C, 245T, 257C, 261C labor organizations, 45C, 104C, 106C, 108C, 132T, 165C, 168C, 173C, 189C, 347C labor unions, 54C, 66C, 71C, 121C, 134C, 168C, 168-69C, 181C, 189C, 206C, 239C, 251-52C, 262-63C, 279C, 300C, 311C labor unrest, 134C manufacturing, 102T, 161C, 163C, 184C minimum wage, 257C, 346C mining, 130T, 142C, 343C prostitution, 55C, 73C, 95C, 166C, 181C, 182C, 223C, 344C retail, 114C, 163C, 190C, 262C catalogs, mail-order, 114C, 152C secretarial, 64C, 121-22C, 124C, 163C, 205C, 211C
460 * Index Employment (continued) stock market, 149C, 198C strikes, 44C, 47-48C, 94C, 121C, 127C, 147C, 179C, 18 IT, 189C, 250C, 251-52C, 282C, 333C, 357C strippers, 324C teenaged, 286C, 305C, 3 IOC trade organizations, 138C trades, 138C, 179C, 181C unemployment, 238C, 248C, 261C, 373C Emshwiller, Carol, 416T Engels, Friedrich, 131C England, 9C, 57C, 124C, 204C
civil war, 8C Parliament, 205-206C suffrage, 191C English, Deirdrc, 360T Enrado, Patricia, 383T Entertainment, 18C, 20C, 76C cabarets, 180C carnivals, 48C circuses, 58C, 112C, 113T games, 95C roller skating, 98C See also Bicycles; Music; Plays; Sports Environmentalism, 148C, 272T, 31 IT, 334C, 417C, 422C writing, 292T See also Feminism, ecoferninisrn E.P. Dutton. See Dutton, F^.P., &Co. Episcopalians. See Religion, Episcopalian Equal Rights Amendment, 220C, 338C, 376C See also Feminism; Suffrage Erdrich, Louise, 388T, 399T, 407T, 434T Erlebacher, Martha Mayer, 422C Erotica, 358T, 389T Esquire Magazine, 249C Essays. See Nonfiction, essays
Essence Magazine, 334C Esteves, Sandra Maria, 369T, 388T Ethiopia, 253T Eustis, Dorothy, 235-36C Fastis, Helen, 282T Evangelicalism. See Religion, Evangelicalism Evans (Wilson), Augusta Jane, 84T, 92T, 99T, 103T, 108-109T, 118T, 137T, 166T, 175T Evans, Mari, 332T, 372T, 38 IT Evanti, Lillian, 2 IOC Evard, Mary E. A., 106C Evers, Medgar, 313C Evolution, 225C Excajeda, Josefma, 254T Executions, 102C, 121C, 134C,214C Exercise. See Body and Health Explorers, 56C, 160T, 179C, 187C, 399C Donner party, 67C See also Adventurers Faderman, Lillian, 372T, 42 OT Faigao, Linda Kalayaan, 388T Fairbank, Janet Ayer, 21718T Faludi, Susan, 42OT Falwell, Jerry, 364C Families, 235T, 303T, 318C, 399C, 403C, 406C, 406C See also Children; Motherhood Family Circle Magazine, 246C Fantasies, 311-12T, 31ST, 376T, 393T, 398T, 409T See also Science Fiction Far, Sui Sin (Edith Maud Eaton), 179T, 186T Farmer, Fannie, 148C, 154T Farmer, Sarah Jane, 166C Farming. See Employment, farming Farnham, Eliza Woodson, 6768T, 101T
Farrar, Eliza, 56T Farrar, Geraldine, 174C Farrar, Margaret, 273T Farrar & Rinehart, 234C Fashion, 15C, 41C, 49C, 72C, 77C, 99C, 103C, 120C, 142C, 145C, 148C, 153C, 164C, 180C, 182C, 210C, 212C, 217C, 219C, 249C, 263C, 277C, 288C, 303C, 317C, 320C, 321C, 324C, 327C, 336C, 358C, 370C, 371C, 374C designers, 261-62C, 296C dress reform, 72C, 77C hairstyles, 24C, 213C, 296C, 312C lingerie, 79C, 193C, 221C, 264C, 377C, 384C shoes, 33C, 48C Faugeres, Margaretta V., 33T, 35T Fauset, Ciystal Dreda Bird, 261C Fauset, Jessie Redmon, 209210T, 214T, 222T, 234T, 242T Faut, Jean, 276C Fawcett Press, 289C Fearn, Anne Walter, 264T Federal Bureau of Investigation. See Government, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Feinstein, Dianne, 42 8C Felice, Cynthia, 399T Felton, Rebecca Latimer, 217-18C Feminism, 59-60C, 113C, 146C, 148C, 175-76C, 185C, 326C, 342-43C, 361C, 383C, 392C, 399C, 4IOC antifeminism, 334C, 374C, 376C, 410C, 429C, 43 3T ecofeminism, 369C, 373C, 42 2 C National Organization for Women (NOW),
Index 313T, 320C, 322C, 336C organizations, 328C, 330C, 332C, 335C, 337C, 343C, 346C, 352C, 369C, 402C writing, 30T, 32T, 36T, 42T, 55T, 59T, 64T, 66T, 70T, 103T, 112T, 117T, 119-20T, 147T, 148T, 158T, 158T, 161T, 169T, 170T, 180-81T, 185T, 189T, 192T, 194T, 197T, 197-98T, 234C, 288C, 299T, 313T, 314T, 329T, 332T, 350T, 355-56T, 356-57T, 3S7T, 360T, 370T, 377T, 385T, 386T, 390T, 403T, 420T, 42 IT, 424T, 427T, 427-28T, 433T, 433T, 43 8T See also Suffrage Feminist Press, 333C Fenno, Jenny, 33T Fenwick, Milicent, 348-49C Ferber, Edna, 222T Ferguson, Miriam Amanda ("Ma"), 222C Fergusson, FJizabeth Graeme, 23T Fern, Fanny. See Parton, Sara Payson Willis Ferraro, Geraldine, 388C Ferris, Mrs. Benjamin G., 87T Fetterley, Judith, 355-56T Field, Kate, 145T Fields, Annie Adams, 123T Fields, Dorothy, 259T Fields, James T., 89C, 108T Fields, Julia, 341T, 352T Filipinas, 238C, 331C, 37677C, 416T writing, 31ST, 320T, 349T, 326-27T, 334T, 338T, 371T, 383T, 385T, 387T, 388T, 390-91T, 392T, 396T, 416T Film, 103T, 155C, 155C, 157C, 175C, 194C,
195C, 1970,21ST, 2190, 219C, 228C, 229C, 231-32C, 234C, 23 50, 2370, 240C, 2470, 247T, 248T, 249C, 2S1C, 2S2C, 2590, 2650, 270C,275T, 276C, 277-78T, 280T, 281C, 282C, 282T, 288-89C, 289-900, 2980, 305T, 317T, 328C, 354C, 3550, 3650, 3690, 382C, 402T, 404C, 4130,4230,4290, 43 6C critics, 193T directors, I860, 235C, 267C, 202C, 283C, 288-890,4150,429300 magazines, 185C newsreels, 1830 producers, 240C screenwriters, 226T, 429C, 429-30C set designers, 261-62C Finch, Sheila, 393T Fine, Vivian, 103T Finland, 1740 Finley, Martha, 104T, 105T, 119T, 122T, 125T, 127T, 139T, 150T, 160T, 172T Fires, 80C, 112C, 114C, 137C, 173C Firestone, Shulamith, 332T Fischer, Mary Ann, 3140 Fisher, Carrie, 402T Fisher, Dorothy Canfield, 199T Fisher, Mary, 9C Fisher, M.F.K., 270T, 276T, 287T, 425T, 43IT Fiske, Sarah, 14T Fitzgerald, Ella, 2S8C Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 144C, 213C Fitzgerald, Zelda, 164C, 245T, 420T Fitzhugh, Louise, 315-16T Flack, Audrey, 383-84C
461
Flagg, Fannie, 402T Flanagan, Edward J., 423C Flanagan, Hallie, 243T, 254C Planner, Janet, 267T Fleming, Louise ("Lulu"), 13 SO Fleming, Peggy, 324C Fleming, Sarah Lee Brown, 203T, 21 IT Fletcher, Bridget Richardson, 25T Fletcher, Inglis, 267T, 286T Fletcher, Lucille, 286T Flores, Gloria, 346T Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley, 189C, 2120, 299T, 309-IOC Flynt, Olivia, 1200 Foley, Lelia Kasensia Smith, 343C Folklore, 149T, 254T Pollen, Eliza Lee, 47T, 59T Follett, Muriel, 264T Fonda, Jane, 3400, 393O Food, 8SC, 87C, 106C, 109C, 127C, 133C, 142C, 144C, 149C, 174C, 1780, 183-840, 2050, 217C, 224C, 239C, 2490, 298-99C, 3 31C, 344C, 347C, 351C chewing gum, 710 cookbooks, 35T, 46-47T, 154T, 265T, 270T, 287T, 298T, 381T cooking schools, 120C, 1480 vegetarianism, 59C Foote, Helen R., 138T Foote, Julia A. J., 134T Foote, Mary Hallock, 130T, 199T, 206T, 338T Forbes, Esther, 273T Forche, Carolyn, 352T, 377T, 434T Ford, Gerald, 338C, 346C, 353C Ford, Henry, 168C Fordham, Mary Weston, 156T Forrest, Mistress, 5C Forten (Grimke), Charlotte, 82T
462 * Index Fortune Magazine, 240C Foster, Frances Smith, 417T Foster, Hannah Webster, 3ST, 36T Foster, Jodie, 3 82 C, 423 C Fox, Kate, 71C Fox, Margaret, 71C Foxe, Fannie, 347C France, 40C, 124C, 281T, 288C Revolution, 31C writing, 288C Franco, Francisco, 2S9C Frank, Elizabeth, 393T Franken, Rose, 264T Frankenthaler, Helen, 294C Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 84C Frank Leslie's Popular Magazine, 120C Franklin, Ann, 22C Franklin, Benjamin, 17C, 18C, 18-19C Franklin, Irene, 181C Franks, Lucinda, 336C Franks, Thetta Quay, 199T Fraser, Gretchen, 287C Frederick, Pauline, 353C Freed, Alan, 298C Freedom's Journal, 47C The Free Enquirer, 49T Freeman, Elizabeth, 28C Freeman, Jan, 43 IT Freeman, Julia Deane ("Mary Forest"), 102T Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins,
137T, 148T, 154T, 168T,
145T, 150T, 156T, 172T,
147T, 152T, 158T, 173T,
177T, 18IT, 203T Freibert, Lucy M., 391-92T Freilicher, Jane, 298C French, Alice, 137T, 14ST, 184T French, Marilyn, 357T Freud, Sigmund, 178C Friday, Nancy, 341T, 357T Friedan, Betty, 313T, 335C, 3 7 7T, 43 IT Frierson, Anne, 257T Fulani, Lenora, 408C
Fuller, Ida, 268C Fuller, Margaret, 60C, 62T, 63C, 64T, 65T, 66T Fuller, Meta Warrick, 218C, 313C Fullilove, Maggie Shaw, 206T The Furies: Lesbian-Feminist Monthly, 337T Futter, Ellen V., 431C Gabe, Frances, 300C Gable, Clark, 275C Gage, Frances ("Aunt Fanny"), 104T Gage, Matilda Joslyn, 119C, 128T, 148T Gaines, Irene, 270-71C Gaitan, Marcela Trujillo, 3 5 IT Gaither, Frances, 267T, 278T, 287T Gaitskill, Mary, 42 OT Galaxy Magazine, 104C Gale, Zona, 21 IT Games. See Entertainment, games Gandhi, Mahatma, 189C Ganz, Marie, 21 IT Garbo, Greta, 237C Garcia, Cristina, 42 5T Garcia, Mila, 387T Gardebring, Sandra, 416-17C Gardener, Helen Hamilton, 146T Gardening, 113-14T, 166T Gardner, Isabella Stewart, 109C, 299T Garfield, James A., 127C, 128C Garrar, Geraldine, 195C Garrigue, Jean, 278T Garrison, Miss, 141C Garrison, William Lloyd, 50C Caspar de Alba, Alicia, 41 IT Gates, Henry Louis Jr., 406T Gaudet, Mrs. Frances Joseph, 188T Gaugain, Mrs., 89T Gay, Mary A. H, 156T Gaynor, Janet, 230C Gay Rights, 299C, 323C, 328C, 332C, 353C,
3S6C, 360C, 365C, 365C, 369C, 369C, 376C, 401C organizations, 290C, 372C See also Homosexuality; Lesbianism Gearhart, Sally Miller, 365T Gellhorn, Martha, 286T, 407T Genderbending, 28C, 39C, 97C, 412C General Motors, 265C Genovese, Kitty, 316C George I (king of England), 17C George II (king of England), 17C Germany, 12C, 124C, 196C, 204C, 204C, 248C, 250C, 265C, 297C Berlin Wall, 309C, 410C Nazism, 257T West Germany, 287C writing, 292T, 292T, 313T Gerstenberg, Alice, 194T Gibbons, Kaye, 402T, 43 IT Gibson, Althea, 303C Gibson, Charles Dana, 153C Gilbert, Sandra M., 35556T Gilchrist, Ellen, 389T, 399T, 41 IT Gilder, Rosamond, 254C Gill, Sarah Prince, 19T Gillespie, Elizabeth Duane, 165T Gilligan, Carol, 377T Gilman, Caroline Howard, 54T, 57T, 59T, 62T Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 136T, 137C, 147T, 158T, 16 IT, 169T, 170T, 181T, 185T, 194T, 254T Gilman, Dorothy, 320T Gingher, Marianne, 399T Ginsburg, Ruth Bader, 43 OC Giovanni, Nikki, 322T, 325T, 332T, 335T, 341T, 349T, 361T, 383T, 408T, 434T Gladding, Mrs. E.N., 91T
Index Glasgow, Ellen, 156-57T, 158T, 166T, 170T, 173T, 188T, 197T, 227T, 245T, 254T, 270T, 276T, 297T, 42 5T Glaspell, Susan, 195C, 19798T, 206T, 21ST, 238T, 254C, 280T Gleason, Kate, 190C, 202C Glenn, Isa, 23 IT Gliick, Louise, 325T, 369T, 416T Glueck, Grace, 342C Goaraan, Muriel, 77T Goddard, Mary, 26C Godey's Lady's Book, 50C, 58T, 78-79C Godwin, Gail, 338T, 346T, 352T, 36ST, 402T, 42OT, 434T Goldberg, Whoopi, 413C Golden, Marita, 383T Goldman, Emma, 136T, 174T, 185T, 19 IT, 192T, 193C, 206207C, 222T, 243T Goldman, Ronald, 434C Gold Rushes, 69C, 93G, 156C Gomez, Jewelle, 42 IT Gonzales, Sylvia Alicia, 346T Gonzales-Berry, Erlinda, 406T Gonzalez, Beatrix, 389T Gonzalez, Jovita, 245T Goodacre, Glenna, 430C Goode, Sarah E., 133-34C Good Housekeeping, 13 3 C Goodhue, Sarah, 12T Goodman, Agdalena, 73C Goodwin, Doris Kearns, 43 5T Gordon, Caroline, 243T, 25IT, 259T, 301T, 338T, 373T, 405T Gordon, Mary, 36IT Gordon, Ruth, 278T, 284T Gorman, Margaret, 217C Gornick, Vivian, 342T, 402T Gothic Fiction, 73T, 94T, 182T, 21ST, 226T, 260T, 348T, 3S4T,
368T, 395T, 409T, 410T, 418T, 42 IT, 43 7T Government, 6C, 26C, 28C, 31C, 33C105C, 256C, 296C ambassadors, 248C, 274C, 287C appointees, 186C, 287C benefits, 255C, 268C, 270T, 279T, 289C, 307C, 323C, 348C, 355C, 359C, 368C, 370C, 406C, 407C cabinet members, 248C, 287C, 296C, 348C, 356C, 382C Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 284C Congress, 103C, 200C, 203C, 209C, 214C, 217-18C, 222C, 229C, 246C, 257C, 261C, 274C, 278C, 291C, 294C, 299C, 319C, 334C, 325C, 340C, 348-49C, 372-73C, 373C, 403C, 408C, 416C, 427C, 428C Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), 177-78C, 223C, 337C Secret Service, 336C state and local, 146C, 17SC, 261C Surgeon General, 43 5 C U. S. Attorney General, 43 OC See also Law; Legislation; Politics Governors, 222C, 225C, 345C, 403C, 415C, 416T G. P. Putnam & Co., 7576T, 147C Grable, Betty, 277C Grafton, Sue, 376T Graham, Florence Nightingale (Elizabeth Arden), 178C Graham, Isabella Marshall, 41T
463
Graham, Jone, 369T, 42 IT Graham, Martha, 227C Graham, Shirley, 264T, 282T Graham's Magazine, 60T Grahn, Judy, 335T, 369T, 378T, 389T, 402T, 408T Grann, Phyllis, 361C Grant, Ulysses S., 106C Grasso, Ella, 345C Grau, Shirley Ann, 316T, 336T, 342T, 357T Graves, Mrs. A. JL, 62-63T, 65T Greeley, Horace, 62C Green, Anna Katharine, 122T, 157T, 194T Green, Henrietta ("Hetty"), 198C Green, Rayna, 387T Greene, Catherine Littlefield, 33C Greer, Germaine, 332T Grenada, 381C Griffith, D. W, 175C, 197C, 328C Grimke, Angelina Emily, S6T, 58-59C Grimke, Angelina Weld, 20910T, 211T Grimke, Sarah Moore, 59T Grosset & Dunlap, 158C Grove Press, 288C Guam, 1 S8C Gubar, Susan, 355-56T Guggenheim, Peggy, 274C Guiney, Louise Imogene, 148T Guinn, Dorothy, 222T Guthrie, Janet, 3S3C Guy, Rosa, 384T Hacker, Marilyn, 346T, 416T Hagedorn, Jessica, 338T, 349T, 416T Hague, Parthenia, 139T Hahn, Emily, 328T Hahn, Kimiko, 412T Hailey, Elizabeth Forsythe, 361T Haizlip, Shirlee Taylor, 43 5T
4<54 *
Index
Hale, Clara McBridc, 32829C Hale, Lilian Westcott, 22930C Hale, Lucretia Peabody, 12ST, 1S7T Hale, Sarah Joscpha Buell, 46T, 48-49T, 491', SST, S7T, S8T, 60T, 661", 68T, 78T, SOT, 10ST Hall, Ann, 41C Hall, Fawn, 403C, 403C Hall, Hazel, 21ST, 22OT, 2 3 IT Hall, Radclyffe, 234C Ilalley, Anne, 36ST Halley's Comet, 184C Hallowell, Anna Davis, 13IT I lamer, Fannie Lou, 316C Hamilton, Alexander, 34C Hamilton, Alice, 206C Hamilton, Edith, 238T Hamilton, Jane, 43 ST Hammon, Mary, 9C Hampl, Patricia, 361T, 373T Handler, Ruth, 30SC Hansberry, Lorraine, 30ST, 328T Hansen, L. Taylor, 236T Harada, Margaret, 307T Harcourt, Brace (publisher), 207-208C Hardeman, Ann Lewis, 7374T Harding, Warren G., 213C Hardwick, Elizabeth, 2 SOT, 313T, 365T Hare, Maud Cuney, 188T, 233T Harjo, Joy, 349T, 384T, 416T Harlem, 255C, 2S9-60C Harlem Renaissance, 20910T, 210T, 218C, 259-60C, 28ST, 287T, 43OT, 430-3IT, 438T Harlequin Enterprises, 288C, 303C Harlow, Jean, 249C, 317T Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 82T, 92T,
108T, 113T, 147T, 16IT, 204T, 417T Harper, Ida Husted, 1S8T Harper and Brothers, 41C, 80C, 108T Harper's Bazaar, 104C, 196C Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 74C, 111C Harper's Weekly, 89C Harrington, Penny, 392C Harris, Barbara, 411C Harris, Bernice Kelly, 270T, 2 SOT Harris, Claire Winger, 229T Harris, Corra, 18 IT, 187T, 198T Harris, Cynthia, 407C Harris, Jean, 368C Harris, Miriam Coles, 94T Harris, Patricia Roberts, 356C Harrison, Barbara Grizzuti, 361T Harrison, Benjamin, 138C Harrison, Constance Cary, 185T Harrison, William Henry, 62C Hart, Marion Rice, 261T Hartley, Florence, 92T Harvard University, 7C, 206C, 280C Harvey, Brett, 43 IT I lasanovitz, Elizabeth, 204T Hastings, Susannah Johnson, 27T Haun, Catherine, 7 IT Flaun, Mildred, 267T Hawaii, 148-49C, 158C Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 63 C, 84C Hayden, Caroline A., 85T Hayden, Sarah Marshall, 82T Hayes, Janet Gray, 345C Hayes, Rutherford B., 121C Haynes, Elizabeth Ross, 215T Hays, Anna Mae, 333C Hays, Ethel, 2 IOC Hays, Mary, 26C H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), 191T, 197T, 279T, 307T, 309T, 372T Head, Edith, 261-62C Healy, Bernadette, 420C
Heard, Josephine Delphine, 143T Hearing-Impaired, 167T, 170C, 234T, 404C Hearst, William Randolph, 126C, 1S2C, 1S8C, 176C, 208C Hearst Corporation, 374C Hearth, Amy Hill, 430-3 IT Hedrick, Joan, 43 5T Heftier, Hugh, 296C, 314T, 314C Height, Dorothy I., 399C Ileilbrun, Carolyn ("Amanda Cross"), 320T Held, John, 2 IOC Hellman, Lillian, 203C, 252T, 264T, 270T, 291C, 292T, 294C, 308T, 328T, 342T, 353T Henley, Beth, 361T Henry, Beulah Louise, 312C Hentz, Caroline Lee, 64T, 68T, 74T, 77T, 78T, SOT, 82T, 85T, 87T Hepburn, Audrey, 298C Hepburn, Katharine, 237C, 247C, 328C, 42 IT Herald Tribune Literary Supplement (Books), 228C Herbst, Josephine, 23IT, 234T, 248T, 252T, 264T Heritage Press, 274-75C Hernandez, Aileen, 337C Hernandez, Irene Beltram, 412T Herndon, Sarah Raymond, 166T Heron, Addie E., 146T Heth, Joyce, S8C Hibbens, Ann, 8C, 11C Higa, Lori, 353T Higgins, Marguerite "Maggie," 292-93T Higginson, Ella Rhoads, 169T Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 97T, 143T Highsmith, Patricia, 289T, 299-300T "Claire Morgan", 294T
Index Hill, Anita, 42 OC, 42 6T Hill, Grace Livingston, 1992 GOT
Hill, Mildred, 149T Hills, Carla, 348C Hiroshima, 280C Hispanics. See Chicanas Historians, 69-70T, 12 IT, 157T, 158T, 177T, 179C, 187T, 205T, 207T, 22IT, 225T, 239T, 241T, 27 IT, 273T, 275-76C, 281T, 305T, 312-13T, 336T, 3601', 36IT, 364C, 391T, 395-96T, 419T, 420T, 43 IT, 43 5T art historians, 366T Histories. See Nonfiction, histories Hitchcock, Mary E., 160T Hitchings, George, 409C Hire, Molly, 403T Hite, Shere, 353T Hitler, Adolf, 247T, 248C, 265C, 270C Hobbs, Lucy B., 103C Hobby, Oveta Gulp, 296C Hobson, Laura Z., 284T Hoffman, Alice, 365T, 408T, 417T, 43 5T Hogan, Linda, 417T Hogan, Louise Eleanor, 159T Hoisington, Elizabeth, 333C Holiday, Billie, 253T, 260C, 262C, 301T Holidays Mardi Gras, 47C Mother's Day, 91C Thanksgiving, 98C Holland, 209C Holley, Marietta, 115T, 137T, 147T Holm, Jeanne, 337C Holmes, Mary Jane, 82T, 8ST, 87T, 89T, 92T, 99T Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 123T Henry Holt & Go., 116C, 207-208C Homelessness, 406C
Homemakers, 192C, 199T, 202-203C, 257G, 280C, 288-89C, 291 C, 300G, 314T, 341G, 350C, 368C, 368C Homosexuality, 295-96G, 314C, 349C homophobia, 156C, 296C, 332C, 3S3C, 360G, 428-29C, 429C See also Gay Rights; Lesbianism Hooker, Isabella Beecher, 94T, 106T, 115T, 166-67T hooks, bell, 373T Hoover, Herbert, 233G Hoover, J. Edgar, 223C Hopkins, Anne, 9T Hopkins, Pauline E., 161T, 166T, 168T, 172T Hopkins, Sarah Winnemucca, 130T Hopper, Grace Murray, 295C Hornblower, Jane Elizabeth, 83T, 87T Horn Book Magazine, 223C Home, Lena, 270C, 374G Horncy, Karen, 259T, 264T, 270T, 322T, 369T Horowitz, Helen Lef kowitz, 435T Hostages, 228C, 244C, 326C, 366C, 372C Hotels, 37C Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 52 C, 126C Households, HOC, 139C, 238C, 268C female-headed, 238C, 267C, 290C, 345C, 345C, 367C, 367C, 368C, 368C, 368C, 373C, 373C housing discrimination, 325C settlement houses, 143C Housekeeping, 48T, 54T, 55T, 66T, SOT, 124C, 133C, 135T, 169T, 176C, 202-203C,
* 465
233C, 239C, 268C, 270G, 272T, 280C, 311C, 319C, 356T appliances, 49C, 73C, 102C, 106C, 111C, 136C, 164C, 187C. See also Inventions cleaning, 300C home economics, 62T, 67T, HOT, 179C, 191C laundry, 4SC, 2S2C manuals, HOT, 234-35T Houston, Jeanne Wakatsuki, 342T, 393T Houston, Pam, 425T Houston, Velina Hasu, 369T, 408T Howard, Maureen, 309T, 320T, 349T, 361T, 378T Howard University, 104C, 114C,129-30C Howe, Elias, 67C Howe, Florence, 333C Howe, Florence Marian, 2041' Howe, Julia Ward, 52C, 96T, 116C, 117T, 123T, 129C, 159T, 177T, 200T Howe, Susan, 393T Howells, William Dean, 89C Howes, Barbara, 287T Hua, Chuang, 325T Huerta, Dolores, 311C Huftalen, Sarah Gillespie, 115T Huget, Virginia, 2IOC Hughes, Dorothy B., 267T, 282T, 36 IT Hughes, Holly, 42 9C Hughes, Sarah Tilghman, 314C Hull, Gloria "['., 376T, 393T Hull, Helen R., 21ST, 245T Hume, Sophia, 20T Humor, 68T, SOT, 83T, 89T, 92T, 105T, HOT, 115T, 121C, 137T, 147T, 158T, 237C, 243T, 26ST, 278T, 280T, 286T, 303T, 327C, 352T, 382T,
466 * Index Humor (continued) 385T, 421T, 422-23C, 43 3T cartoons, 190C, 2IOC, 250C, 269C, 271C, 292-93C Humphreys, Josephine, 394T, 403T Hungary, 204C, 3QIC Hunter, Kristin, 361T Hunton, Addie W, 21 IT Hurst, Fannie, 243T, 248T Hurston, Zora Neale, 20910T, 225C, 2S2T, 2S4T, 2S9T, 264T,
273T, 286T Hustler Magazine, 347C Hutchins, Maude, 289T Hutchinson, Anne, 7-8C, 89C Hutchinson, E. M., 139C Huxtable, Ada Louise, 316T, 332T, 394T Hyde, Nancy Maria, 40T Hydropathy, 85C. See also Medicine Iceland, 209C, 248C Ikeda, Patricia, 362T Iko, Momoko, 332T, 336T, 384T Illness, 91T, 341T, 360T, 363T, 372C AIDS, 372C, 391C, 398C, 401C, 407C, 408T, 408T, 414T, 414T, 414T, 425C cancer, 39C, 232-33C, 252T, 268C, 370T, 413T, 420C, 425C, 434C cholera, 51C, 72C, 103C diphtheria, 100C heart disease, 420C measles, 114C scarlet fever, 114C tuberculosis, 101C, 182C typhoid, 98-99T, 114C Immigration, 12C, 32C, 69C, 82C, 93C, 129C, 134C, 142C, 145C, 151C, 162C, 166C, 174C,
182C, 191T, 199C, 215C, 224C, 279C, 318-19C Imperialism anti-imperialism, 158C Monroe Doctrine, 44C Incest, 382C, 398C Independent Journal, 29C India, 189C Indian Americans writing, 2 SOT, 304T, 310T, 312T, 333T, 336T, 3SOT, 356T, 357T, 395T, 404T, 413T, 414T, 432T Indian's Friend, 138T Infertility, 330C, 389C, 407C, 412C, 416C, 423C See also Childbirth; Pregnancy Ingram, Mildred Prewett ("Bowen"), 280T, 297T Ingram, Rosa Lee, 285C Insanity, 92 C, 104C, 136T Interracial relationships, 8C, 11C, 13C, 38C, 74C Invasions, 174C, 278C, 297C, 301C, 310C, 327C, 331C, 381C, 412C See also Wars Inventions, 16C, 32C, 3334C, 35C, 37C, 39C, 45C, 55C, 62C, 64C, 67C, 73C, 77C, 79C, 87C, 91C, 92C, 99C, 102C, 106C, 111C, 114C, 116C, 120C, 124C, 133C, 133-34C, 135C, 136C, 137C, 187C, 190C, 193C, 198-99C, 230C, 281C, 292C, 301C, 305C, 312C, 319C Iran Iran-Contra deal, 397C Ireland, 69T Irwin, Harriet Morrison, 108C Irwin, Inez Haynes, 192T Irwin, May, 15SC Ishimoto, Haruto, 254T Israel, 287C
Italy, 124C, 217C, 253T Ivins, Molly, 42 IT Jackson, Andrew, 48C, 50C, 51-52C Jackson, Helen Hunt, 119T, 123T, 128T, 13 IT Jackson, The Reverend Jesse, 388C Jackson, Mahalia, 281C Jackson, Mattie J., 103T Jackson, Aunt Molly, 2SSC Jackson, Rebecca Cox, 64T Jackson, Shirley, 286T, 305T Jacob, Polly, 193C Jacobi, Mary Putnam, 12 IT, 150T Jacobs, Harriet, 97T James, Alice, 252T James, Henry, 94C Jamison, Judith, 415C Jancway, Elizabeth, 276T, 336T Janis, Elsie, 181C, 206T, 240C Janowitz, Tama, 399T Japan, 114C, 176C, 187T, 248C, 265C, 271C, 2 8 IT Japanese Americans, 271-72T, 314T, 319C, 331C internment, 273C writing, 226T, 246-47T, 254T, 271T, 283T, 288T, 293T, 294T, 295T, 296T, 307T, 322T, 332T, 335T, 339T, 340T, 342T, 353T, 353T, 355T, 362T, 365T, 366T, 367T, 369T, 37IT, 373T, 384T, 386T, 389T, 393T, 394T, 397T, 404T, 405T, 408T, 410T, 412T, 42 ST See also Asian Americans Jaramillo, Cleofas, 265T, 3 DOT Jarrell, Randall, 405T Jarvis, Anna Reeves, 91C Jefferson, Thomas, 34C, 36C
Index Jehovah's Witnesses. See Religion, Jehovah's Witnesses Jelsma, Clara Mitsuko, 373T Jemison, Mae, 42 8C Jen, Gish, 42 IT Jerauld, Charlotte A., 74T Jewett, John P., 89-90C Jewett, Sarah Orne, 12 IT, 123T, 128T, 13 IT, 133T, 134-35T, 137T, 143T, 150-5 IT, 153T, 154T, 160T, 165T Jewish Americans, 159T, 189C writing, 53T, 129T, 130T, 148T, 149C, 153T, 157C, 159T, 162T, 176C, 179-80T, 186T, 188T, 19 IT, 193T, 200T, 203T, 204T, 207C, 21 IT, 212T, 21ST, 222T, 226T, 227T, 228T, 233T, 236T, 243T, 246T, 248T, 253T, 256T, 258T, 262T, 268T, 278T, 280T, 28IT, 283T, 284T, 290T, 302T, 306T, 308T, 309T, 310T, 31 IT, 32 IT, 329T, 333T, 347T, 354T, 359T, 362T, 370T, 379T, 3 SOT, 384T, 395T, 404T, 408T, 412T, 413T, 42 IT, 426T, 42 7T, 43 OT Joe, Jeanne, 378T John Wiley & Sons, 40C Johns Hopkins University, 118C, 157C Johnson, Amelia Etta Hall, 143-44T, 15 IT Johnson, Andrew, 101-102C, 103C Johnson, Anna, 416C Johnson, Diane, 317T, 325T, 403T Johnson, Dorothy, 296T, 303T Johnson, Eleanor, 23IT
Johnson, Emily Pauline (Tehakionwake), 144T, 153T Johnson, Evelyn, 231C Johnson, Georgia Douglas, 204T, 209-10T, 210T, 218T, 225T, 23IT Johnson, Henrietta, 15C Johnson, Josephine Winslow, 252T Johnson, Joyce, 31 IT, 362T, 384T, 412T Johnson, Kathryn M., 21 IT Johnson, "Lady Bird," 327C Johnson, Lyndon B., 315C, 316C, 317C, 320C, 323-24C Johnson, Maggie Pogue, 18 IT Johnston, Annie Fellows, 154T Johnston, Mary, 161-62T, 185T, 189T, 192T, 200T, 207T, 220T, 253T Jones, Amanda, 116C Jones, Gayl, 349T, 353T, 384T Jones, Mary Harris ("Mother"), 239C Jones, Paula, 434C Jong, Erica, 342T Joplin, Janis, 321C, 365C Jordan, Barbara, 340C, 353C Jordan, June, 346T, 394T Jordan, Marian, 256C Journalism, 18C, 60T, 69C, 116C, 129C, 136T, 139T, HOC, 167T, 171T, 73C, 232T, 247T, 256T, 258C, 267T, 268T, 286C, 306T, 307T, 313T, 314T, 326T, 335-36C, 352T, 370T, 383T, 387T, 407T, 420T, 42 IT, 427T, 434T cartoons. See Humor columnists, 158C, 193T, 229T, 242T, 260T, 271-72T, 307C, 336C correspondents, 274C, 29293T
* 467
crossword puzzles, 224C, 226C,273T magazines. See individual titles newspapers editing, 22C, 86T, 228C technologies, 53C See individual titles organizations, 105C, 150C, 176C Journals. See Journalism, magazines; Nonfiction, diaries; individual titles Joyce, James, 19IT, 215C, 304T Joyner, Florence Griffith, 408C Joyner, Marjorie, 230C Joyner-Kersee, Jackie, 408C de Juarez, Jovita Idar, 185C Judaism See Religion, Judaism Juvenile Miscellany, 46T Kadohata, Cynthia, 412T, 42 5T Kael, Pauline, 317T, 342T Kaepernick, Bertha, 143C Kagan, Janet, 408T Kakugawa, Frances, 332T, 353T Kamenshek, Dorothy "Kammie," 276C Kane, Elizabeth Dennistoun Wood, 117T Kanin, Fay, 286T Kasebier, Gertrude, 169C Kaufman, Gloria, 42 IT Kawano, Doris, 389T Kaysen, Susanna, 403T, 431 32T Keckley, Elizabeth Hobbs, 106T Keith, Agnes Newton, 265T Keller, Helen, 167T, 170C, 234T Kelley, Beverly, 366C Kelley, Edith Summers, 22 IT, 346T Kelley, Emma Dunham, 146T, 159T Kelley, Florence, 159-60C
468 * Index Kelley, Mary, 433T Kelley, Virginia, 43S-36T Kellogg, Fanny, 171-72T Kellogg, Dr. John Harvey,
109C Kelly, Grace, 301C Kemble, Fanny, 99T Kennedy, Adrienne, 316T Kennedy, Edward, 42 6C Kennedy (Onassis), Jacqueline, 311C, 326C, 349C, 434C Kennedy, John F., 308C, 3 IOC, 314C, 314-15C Kennedy, Robert, 327C Kenney (O'Sullivan), Mary, 168C Kenney, Susan, 389T Kensington Ladies' Erotica Society, 389T Kent State University, 333C Kenyon Review, 264C Kepley, Ada H., 112C Kerouac, Jack, 384T Kerrjean, 303T, 308T Key, Evelyn, 165T Keyes, Frances Parkinson, 257T, 284T, 286T Khouri, Callie, 42 9C Kies, Mary, 39C Kikumura, Akemi, 373T Kilgore, Carrie, 178C Kilmer, Aline, 225T Kim, Chungmi, 378T Kim, Elaine H, 384T Kim, Ronyoung, 399T Kim, Willyce, 338T Kimball, Gussie, 308T Kincaid, Jamaica, 394T, 417T King, Billiejean, 3IOC, 43435C King, Coretta Scott, 326-27C King, Elizabeth, 92T King, Grace Elizabeth, 139T, 147T, 149T, 198T, 245T King, Martin Luther, Jr., 313C, 315C, 326C King, Rodney, 42 6C King, Sieh King, 166-67C Kingsolver, Barbara, 408T, 412T, 417T, 432T
Kingston, Maxine Hong, 353T, 369T, 412T Kinsey, Alfred, 29S-96C Kirkland, Caroline Stansbury, 60T, 63T, 66-67T, 71T, SOT, 83T, 101T Kirkland, Gelsey, 340C Kitt, Eartha, 327C Kizer, Carolyn, 309T, 389T Klein, Charlotte, 291-92C Klickman, Flora, 22 IT Ku Klux Klan (KKK), 402 C Knickerbocker Magazine, 5.3C Knight, Margaret, 111C Knight, Sarah Kemble, 44-45T Knopf, Alfred A., 195-96C, 321C Knopf, Blanche, 321C Knopf, Marcy, 43 OT Roller, Alice, 373T, 417T Kolodny, Annette, 391-92T Koo, Hui-lan, 276T Koob, Kathryn, 366C de Kooning, Elaine, 314-ISC Koontz, Elizabeth Duncan, 326C Korea, 176C, 292C, 292-93T Korean Americans, 331C writing, 338T, 377T, 378T, 3 SOT, 399T Korean War. See Wars, Korean Kosover, Toni, 346T Kowalski, Sharon, 42 6C Krant/,, Judith, 362T, 369T, 378T Krasner, Lee, 293C Kreps, Juanita Morris, 356C Kruger, Barbara, 383C Kubler-Ross, Elisabeth, 329T, 373T Kubojiri, Clara, 365T Kumin, Maxine, 336T, 338T Kummer, Claire, 248T Kuo, Helena (Kuo Chin ch'iu), 267T, 278T, 373T Kusz, Natalie, 412T Kwolek, Stephanie, 319C Labor. See Employment, labor The Ladder, 30IT
The Ladies' Companion, 9495T Ladies'Home Journal, 130C,
142C,'l4SC, 173C, 260T Ladies' National Magazine, 64C Lady's Home Magazine, 78C La Elesche, Susan (Picotte), 128T, HOC Lallaye, Beverly, 364C Lamaze, Fernand, 304C Lamb, Martha J, 12 IT Lane, Rose Wilder, 2S4-S5T lang, k.d., 399C Lang, Lucy Robins, 286T Lange, Dorothea, 2S8C Langhorne, Nancy Witcher (Lady Astor), 205206C Langton, Jane, 316'F Lanot, Marra, 387T Larcom, Lucy, HOT Larison, Dr. Cornelius Wilson, 129-30T Larsen, Nella, 209-10T, 23 IT, 234T Larson, Wendy, 400T Lathrop, Julia Clifford, 186C Lathrop, Mary, 203C Larimer, Elizabeth, 8ST Latin Americans writing, 406T See also Chicanas Latinas. See Chicanas; individual ethnicities Law, 108T, 42 2T, 43 6C American Bar Association, 122C, 203C, 403C, 436-37C judges, 251C, 257C, 266C, 287C, 30SC, 311C, 320C, 372C, 416-17C judicial decisions, 8C, 14C, 70C, 154C, 193C, 193-94C, 200C, 342C, 357C, 361 C, 376C, 389C, 398C, 402C, 421C, 423C, 426C, 428-29C juries, IOC, 14C, 125C, 158C, 348C justices of the peace, 11OC
Index lawyers, 107C, 112C, 114C, " 123C, 129-30C, 156C, 181C, 203C, 290C, 343C, 357C, 372C, 388C, 421C schools, 107C, 3IOC, 325C, 332C, 337C See also Legislation; Supreme Court Lawrence, D. H., 222C Lawrence, Florence, 175C Lawson, Kate Drain, 254C Law-Yone, Wendy, 384T Lax, Leona Gross, 264C Lazarus, Emma, 129T, 130T Lazarus, Josephine, 153T Lee, Andrea, 389T Lee, Ann, 28C Lee, G. M., 336T Lee, Gypsy Rose, 265-66T, 267T Lee, Hannah, S7T Lee, Harper, 308T Lee, Jarena, 56T Lee, Jeanette, 200T, 21ST Lee, Mary, 329T, 342T Lee, Mary Ann, 58C Lee, Mary Wong, 365T Lee, Nancy Howell, 329T Lee, Virginia, 308T, 313T Leech, Margaret, 271T, 271T, 305T Leftenant, Nancy C., 285C Legislation, 56C, 103C, 118C, 136C, 162C, 174C, 181C, 191C, 205C, 255C, 261C, 285C, 302C, 307C, 311C, 313C, 315C, 318C, 325C, 387C, 387-88C, 397C, 402C, 406C See also Government; Law Le Guin, Ursula K., 32S-26T, 329T, 336T, 346T, 417T Leibovitz, Annie, 340C Leigh, Vivian, 283C Lem, Carol, 349T, 378T L'Engle, Madeleine, 311-12T, 338T, 346T Lennon, John, 330C
Lesbianism, 9C, 124C, 165C, 176C, 235C, 254-55C, 299C, 328C, 343C, 345C, 346C, 349C, 356C, 365C, 399C, 426C, 428-29C, 429C, 434-35C writing, 218T, 234C, 2S6T, 257T, 294T, 301T, 302T, 307T, 31 IT, 317T, 331T, 333T, 334-35T, 337T, 340T, 345T, 359T, 362-63T, 372T, 375T, 382T, 389T, 391T, 392T, 398T, 404T, 410T, 414T, 415T, 418T, 420T, 42 IT, 424T, 427T, 434T, 437T See also Gay Rights; Homosexuality Leslie, Eliza, 46-47T, 48T, 53T, 62T, 63T, 64T, 70T Leslie, Mrs. Frank, 191C Leslie, Miriam Squier, 122T Leslie's Weekly, 84C, 191C LeSueur, Meridel, 255T, 268T, 362T Letters. See Nonfiction, letters Levertov, Denise, 282T, 305T, 316T, 332T, 342T, 353T, 365T, 403T, 425T Levin, Jennifer, 398C Levine, Marilyn, 353-54C Lewis, Abigail, 289T Lewis, Estelle, 65T, 106T Lewis, Janet, 24ST, 27IT, 276T, 284T, 305T Lewis, Mary Edmonia, 92C Lewis, Sinclair, 240C Lewis, Wyndham, 20IT Li, Gladys, 232T Libbey, Laura Jean, 130T, HOT The Liberator, SOC, 18SC, 204C Liberia, 122C Libraries, 6C, 17C, 54C, 119C, 152C, 154T, 161-62C, 346C, 364C
469
librarians, 204-05C, 214C, 261C,284T Library of Congress, 36C, 255C, 392T organizations, 119C, 184C Libya, 397C Life Magazine, 258C Liluokalani (Hawaiian queen), 148-49C Lily, 72 C Lim, Genny, 378T Lim, Janet, 304T Lim, Shirley, 369T, 412T Limmer, Ruth, 370T Lin, Adet, 2651', 271T, 276T, 309T Lin, Alice P., 408T Lin, Anor, 265T, 271T Lin, Hazel Ai Chun, 293T, 308T, 353T, 370T Lin, Maya Ying, 377C Lin, Meimci, 265T, 27 IT Lincoln, Abraham, 92C, 95C, 97C, 98C, 101-102C, 102C Lincoln, Mary Todd, 106T Lincoln University, 81-82C Lind, Jenny, 76C Lindbergh, Anne Morrow, 3GOT, 312T Lindbergh, Charles, 229C Ling, Amy, 390T Lippincott, Sara Jane ("Grace Greenwood"), 74T Lippincott's Magazine, 107C Literacy, IOC, 144C, 188C Literary Digest, 144C Literary Magazine and Register, 37C Literary Review, 214C Literary Salons, 2IT, 23T, 60C,210T Literary Societies, 50-51C Little, Brown & Co., 69C Little, JoAnne, 350C The Little Review, 19IT, 215C Liveright, Horace Brisbin, 203C Lloyd, Susan, 378T Locke, Jane E., 85T Lockridge, Frances, 268T Lockridge, Richard, 268T
470
Index
Lockwood, Belva, 123C, 131C Logan, Mary, HOT, 187T, 189T Logan, Myra Adele, 300C Logan, Olive, 108T, 112T Logan, Onnie Lee, 412T Lombard, Carole, 231-32C, 237C,275C Long, Hucy, 255C Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 92 C Loos, Anita, 226T, 282T Lorraine, Lilith, 236T Lord, BetteBao, 316T, 373T Lorde, Audre, 333T, 342T, 370T, 378'L, 390T, 399T, 43 2T Los Angeles Examiner, 229T Lothrop, Harriet, 128T Loughborough, Mary Ann Webster, 10 IT Louisiana Purchase, 37C, 273T Love, Nancy Harker, 27374C Lowell, Amy, 19IT, 207T, 226T Lowell, James Russell, 89C Lowell, Josephine Shaw, 14546C
Lowell, Robert, 405T The Lowell Offering, 62T, 63'L Lowry, Beverly, 357T, 362T, 373T, 403T Lowry, Jean, 22T Loy, Mina, 22 IT, 378T Loy, Myrna, 237C Luce, Clare Boothe, 2S7T, 274C Ludwig, Mary, 26C Luhan, Mabel Dodge, 255T Luhring, Marie, 212-13C Lukens, Matilda Barnes, HOT Lumpkin, Grace, 245T, 25ST, 265T Luna, Donyale, 317C Lupino, Ida, 288-89C Lupton, Mary Jane, 352T Lurie, Alison, 347T, 373T, 390T Lutz, Alma, 326T Luxembourg, 209C
Lynd, Helen Merrcll, 222C, 235T Lynd, Robert S., 222C, 235T Lyon, Mary, 57-58C Lytle, Lutie, 156C McAuliffe, Christa, 398C McBride, Mary Margaret, 306T McCall's Magazine, 116C, 157C McCardell, Claire, 263C McCarthy, Joseph, 291C, 297C McCarthy, Maiy, 294T, 3 GOT, 303T, 314T, 42 5T McCarty, Virginia Dill, 357C McClendon, Rose, 254C McClintock, Barbara, 383C McCloy, Helen, 26IT, 293T McClure'sMagazine, 47C, 149C McCorkle, Jill, 390T, 403T, 42 5T McCormick, Anne O'Hare, 232T McCorvey, Norma, 43 6T McCrumb, Sharyn, 436T McCullers, Carson, 268T, 271T, 282T, 293T, 310T McCunn, Ruthanne Lum, 365T, 374T, 394T, 408T McDaniel, Hattie, 265C McDermott, Alice, 378T MacDonald, Betty, 2SOT MacDougall, Alice Foote, 17SC McDowell, Anne E., 86T McDowell, Katherine ("Sherwood Bonner"), 129T, 13 IT McElroy, Colleen, 366T, 403T, 417-18T McGee, Anita, 165-66C McGerr, Patricia, 282T McGinley, Phyllis, 308T McGuire, Judith W, 104T Maclnnes, Helen, 27IT, 326T
Mclntosh, Maria Jane, 65T, 68T, 70T, SOT, 87T, 99T McKay, Claude, 2ISC McKinley, William, 154C, 16SC McKinney, Nina Mae, 234C McKinney, Susan, 115C MacLaine, Shirley, 384T, 394T, 403T MacLane, Mary, 167T McLean, Edith Eleanor, 138C McLean, Ethel Louise, 187T McMillan, Terry, 403T, 412T, 42 5T Macmillan & Co., 208C MacMonnies, Mary, 149C McNaron, Toni, 425T McPherson, Aimce Semple, 228C Madison, James, 39C Madonna, 383C Magazines. See Journalism; individual titles Magill (White), Helen, 121C Mahoney, Bertha, 223C Mahoney, Mar}' Elizabeth, 123-24C Mailer, Norman, 324-25C Mairs, Nancy, 399T, 413T, 417T, 43 6T Malcolm X, 318C Malkiel, Theresa, 181T Manahan, Nancy, 392T Mandame, Mary, 8C Mankiller, Wilma, 403C, 432T Mann, Mrs. Horace, 117T Mannes, Marya, 291C Manning, Marie, 158C Mansfield, Belle, 107C Manufacturing. See Employment, manufacturing Mao Tse Tung, 43 6T Mar, Laureen, 379T Maracle, Lee, 417T Marines. See Military, marines Mark, Diane Mei Lin, 394T Marks, Jeanette, 165C Maron, Margaret, 42S-26T Marquez, Teresa, 406T
Index Marriage, 4C, 5C, 6-7C, 32C, 46C, 79C, 84T, 85C, 96T, 99C, 102C, 143C, 143-44C, 217C, 219C, 227T, 250C, 301C, 326C, 330C, 346C, 392C, 414-15C Marsh, Mae, 328C Marshall, Catherine, 293T, 323T Marshall, Paule, 306T, 310T, 384-8ST, 42IT Martin, Anne, 203C Martin, Helen Reimensnyder, 170T, 172T, 177T Martin, Patricia Preciado, 371T, 385T, 409T, 427T Martinez, Maria, 374T Martinez, Maria Montoya, 266C Maso, Carole, 399T Mason, Alice Trumbull, 287C Mason, Bobbie Ann, 3 SOT, 379T, 394T, 408T, 432T Mason, Helena Arkansas, 167T Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 110-111C Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 68-69C "Massachusetts Queen," 11C Massee, May, 219C The Masses, 18SC Masters, Sybilla, 16C Masturbation, 286C, 29596C, 435C See also Sexuality Matisse, Henri, 188T Matlin, Marlee, 404C Matsueda, Pat, 394T Matsuoka, Yoko, 294T Matthews, Burnita S, 287C Matthews, Victoria Earle, 149T, 157C Maynard, Joyce, 343T, 374T Mayors, 136C, 343C, 345C, 360C, 364C, 415-16C, 417C, 423C Mead, Margaret, 232T, 338T, 387T Mebane, Mary, 374T, 385T
Medicaid. See Government, benefits Medicare. See Government, benefits Medicine, 17C, 43C, 51C, 65C, 67-68C, 95C, 117T, 120C, 121C, 127C, 137C, 157C, 164-65C, 339T, 357C, 360T, 409C, 420C doctors, 71-72C, 91-92C, 100C, 103C, 115C, 12IT, 125C, 135C, 140C, 144-45C, 148T, 164C, 165-66C, 200C, 212C, 220C, 275C, 284C, 300C, 307C, 316C, 352C, 357C, 401C, 415C, 43SC See also Military, doctors manuals, 210T, 286T nurses, 97C, 98-99T, 99C, 123-24C, 128C, 16566C, 176T, 170C, 177C, 335C See also Military, nurses schools, 75C, 81C, 86-87C, 91-92C, 100C, 103C, 164C, 226C, 280C surgeries, 39C, 80C, 173C, 286C, 305C, 42SC See also Midwifery; Military, doctors; Pregnancy Medina, Louisa, 59T Mee, Cornelia, 66T Meigs, Cornelia, 248T Meisler, Andy, 436T Melville, Margarita, 370T Mena, Maria Cristina ("Maria Chambers"), 192-93T Mencken, H. L, 224C Mendenhall, Dorothy Reed, 23ST Mennonites. See Religion, Mennonites Menopause, 336C, 422T, 43 IT Men's Movement, 397C Menstruation, 12IT, 155C, 217C, 249C, 344C, 352T, 360C, 372C Mentor Books, 286C
* 477
Meriwether, Elizabeth Avery, 113T Meriwether, Louise, 333T, 336T, 338T, 343T Merriam, Eve, 198T, 336T Merril, Judith, 289-90T Merrington, Marguerite, 146T Merritt, Anna Lea, 150C The Messenger, 209-10T Messick, Dale (Dalia), 269C Metalious, Grace, 301T Methodism. Sec Religion, Methodism Mexican Americans. See Chicanas Mexico, 189C, 192-93T, 198C, 201C, 204C, 267C Mexican War. See Wars, Mexican Meyer, Annie Nathan, 148T Meyer, Helen, 274-75C, 275C MGM Studios, 235C Midler, Bette, 365C, 370T Midwifery, 87C, 95C, 164C, 164-65C, 235T, 412T See also Childbirth Miele, Elizabeth, 243T Migrations, 7C, 95C, 123C, 197C Miles, Emma Bell, 172T Miles, Josephine, 265T, 347T Military, 285C, 303C, 341C, 349C, 423C, 423-24C, 424C, 428-29C academies, 346C, 351-52C admirals, 295C air force, 317C, 336C army, 262T, 273C, 279C, 333C doctors, 275C coast guard, 273C, 366C computers, 295C doctors, 200C marines, 346C, 377C Medal of Honor, 357C navy, 273C, 278C, 340C, 347C, 426C nurses, 165-66C, 285C, 317C pilots, 273-74C
472 * Index Milk, Harvey, 360C Millar, Margaret, 3 DOT Millay, Edna St. Vincent, 187T, 200T.212T, 214C, 21ST, 22 IT, 271T, 276T, 2941' Miller, Caroline, 248T Miller, Ella May, 3 SOT Miller, Isabel, 329T Miller, Jane, 392T Miller, May, 235T Miller, Sue, 399T, 403T, 41ST, 43 2T Millett, Kate, 329T, 334C, 347T, 357T, 418T Millican, Arthenia J. Bates, 329T Mills, Tarpe, 271C Mills, Wilbur, 347C Min, Anchee, 43 6T Mining. See Employment, mining Ministers. See Religion, preachers Mink, Patsy, 319C Minorities, 257-58C Minot, Susan, 413T Minuit, Peter, 7C Mirikitani, Janice, 362T Mishima, Sumie Seo, 27IT Mississippi State College, 131-32C Mitchell, Joan, 294C Mitchell, Margaret, 2S7-58T Mitchell, Maria, 7S-76C, 118C Mitchell, S. Weir, 136-37C Mitford, Jessica, 314T Mix, Mrs. Edward, 13 IT Mockjerrie, 316C Modern Maturity, 304C Mohr, Nicholasa, 343T, 3SOT, 357T, 366T, 394-95T, 399T Moise, Penina, 53T Molloy, John T., 358C Money. See Economics, currency Momnouth College, 105C Monroe, Harriet, 144C, 187T Monroe, James, 40C Monroe, Marilyn, 312C
Monroe, Mary, 395T Montagu, Hannah Lord, 45C Montague, Margaret Prescott, 173T, 18 IT Montana, Patsy, 255C Montgomery Ward & Co., 114C Moody, Anne, 326T Moody, Christina, 18IT Moody, Deborah, 9C Moore, Ann, 358C Moore, Mrs. H. J., 85T, 89T, 94T Moore, Marianne, 126-27C, 187T, 21ST, 222T, 226T, 255T, 293T, 323T, 417C Moore, Milcah Martha, 23T Moorhead, Sarah Parson, 19T Mora, Pat, 390T, 400T Moraga, Cherrie, 382T, 385T, 400T, 432T Moral Reform, 55T, S9T, 60C, 83T, 104C, 106T, 115C, 124-25C, 130C, 136C, 136T, 148C, 172C, 181C See also Fashion, dress reform Morales, Aurora Levins, 400T Morales, Rosario, 400T Morehouse, Kathleen Moore, 258T Morgan, Berry, 32IT, 347T Morgan, Carrie Law, 215T Morgan, Elizabeth, 402 C Morgan, Julia, 208C Morgan, Mario, 43 6T Morgan, Robin, 33.3T Mormons. See Religion, Mormons Morris, Esther McQuigg Slack, HOC, 142C Morris, Margaret, S6-57T Morrison, Toni, 319C, 333T, 343T, 3S2C, 3S7T, 374T, 403T, 426T, 432T Morrow, William, 228C Morrow, William, & Co., 374C Mortimer, Lillian, 173T
Morton, Azie Taylor, 356C Morton, Martha, 146T Morton, Sarah Wentworth, 32T, 35-6T, 43T Moscone, George, 360C Moses, Anna Mary ("Grandma"), 267C Moskowitz, Faye, 404T Mossell, Mrs. N. F., 15 IT Mossell, Sadie Tanner, 216C Mother Earth, 174T Motherhood, 53T, 105T, HOC, 156C, 186T, 191-92C, 204T, 210T, 224C, 298-99C, 308C, 3 IOC, 319C, 354T, 374T, 382T, 402 C, 407T, 430C, 436C grandmothers, 348-49C, 423C Mother's Day, 91C, 193C single, 182C, 401C, 427C surrogacy, 407C, 416C widows, 118C Mother's Magazine, 53T Motion Picture Magazine, 185C Motley, Constance Baker, 320C Mott, James, 13 IT Mott, Lucretia, 52C, 62C, 70C, 71-72T, 13 IT Moulton, Louise Chandler, 87T, 144T Mount Holyoke College, 5758C, 165C, 177C, 360C Mount Union College, 67C Mourning Dove (Hum-IshuMa), 229T, 248T Moynihan, Patrick, 318C Ms. Magazine, 336C, 417C Mudge, Generva, 160C Mukherjee, Bharati, 336T, 3 SOT, 357T, 395T, 404T, 413T, 432T Muller, Marcia, 357-58T Munro, Eleanor, 366T, 404T, 408T Munsey's Magazine, 141T Murders, 14C, 19C, 23C, 53T, 92C, HOC, 147C, 206C, 285C, 304C,
Index 313C, 324C, 329C, 350C, 355C, 368C, 398C, 403C, 434C Murfree, Mary Noailles, 13132T, 133T, 146T Murray, Judith Sargent, 30T, 32T, 3ST, 36T Murray, Pauli, 333T, 352C Murray, W.H.H., 108-109C Museums, 2SC, 45C, 241C, 324-25C, 404C, 431C Music, 33C, 33-34T, 63C, 119-20T, 128C, 172T, 298C, 353C, 369C composers, 54T, 103T, I47C, 1S5C, 169C, 245C, 369C jazz, 412C opera, first, ] 8C rock, 320C, 329C See also Singers; Songs Mussolini, Benito, 217C Myer, Debbie, 327C Myers, Mary ("Carlotta"), 133C Mysteries, 103T, 122T, 152T, 157T, 177-78T, 180T, 189T, 194T, 200T, 215T, 21ST, 226T, 232T, 234T, 239-40T, 244T, 246T, 25 IT, 260T, 261T, 263-64T, 265-66T, 267T, 267T, 268T, 273T, 275T, 276T, 276-77C, 277T, 277T, 279T, 282T, 283T, 285T, 293T, 299-300T, 300T, 316T, 320T, 332T, 3S7-S8T, 3S9T, 361T, 376T, 397T, 41OT, 415T, 416T, 425-26T, 42 6T NAACP, 172C, 180C, 197C, 196-97C, 201C, 215C See also African Americans, organizations; Civil Rights Nagasaki, 280C Nardi, Marcia, 302T
Nathan, George Jean, 224C Nathoy, Lalu (Polly Bemis), 374T The Nation, 102C National Era, 69T National Geographic Magazine, 138C Native Americans, 3C, 3T, 4C, SC, 6C, 7C, 8C, 11C, 14C, 19C, 25C, 35C, 38C, 46-47C, 48T, 50C, 51-52C, S2C, 59C, 77C, 9394C, 10ST, 121C, 125C, 128T, 129C, 13 IT, 136C, 140C, 142C, 146C, 170T, 193T, 222C, 225T, 227C, 266C, 284C, 311C, 330C, 359C, 359T, 359-60C, 360C, 365C, 367C, 392C, 403C, 430T population. See Population wars. See Wars, Native American wars writing, 46T, 69T, 130T, 138T, 144T, 145T, 161T, 229T, 242T, 244T, 248T, 316T, 343T, 349T, 358T, 3S9T, 375T, 376T, 381T, 382T, 384T, 387T, 388T, 347-48T, 391T, 392T, 397T, 397-98T, 399T, 406T, 407T, 407T, 408T, 410T, 412T, 416T, 417T, 422T, 428T, 43 OT, 43 2T, 43 4T, 43 6T NATO, 287C Naturalists, 73T, HOT, 184T See also Environmentalism; Gardening Navratilova, Martina, 43435C Navy. See Military, navy Naylor, Gloria, 379T, 39ST, 408T, 42 6T Neal, Alice Emilly Bradley, 74T, 90T
413
Needlework, 27C, 47-48C, 66T, 67C, 69T, 77T,
77C, 83T, 89T, 117T, 123T, 132T, 143T, 157T, 22 IT, 262T Neel, Alice, 333-34C Neely, Barbara, 42 6T Negroes. See African Americans Nelson, Nellie, 275-76C Nesmith, Bette, 301C Nestor, Agnes, 168-69C Nevelson, Louise, 270C New Age. See Religion, New Age New American Library (NAL), 286C Newberry, Julia Ross, 248T Newell, Fanny, SIT Newman, Frances, 223T, 227T, 232T New Masses, 228C New Orleans Picayune, 57C The New Republic,'192C Newspapers. See Journalism, newspapers; individual titles Newsweek Magazine, 249C New York Daily News, 208C The New Yorker, 220T, 226C, 229T, 232C, 383T New York Evening Journal, 158C New York Evening Post, 37C New York Herald, 55C, 173C New York Journal, 152C, 158C New York Ledger, 69C New York Morning Telegraph, 193T New York Review of Books, 313T New York Sun, 53C New York Stock Exchange, 356C New York Times, 77C, 273T, 316T, 342C, 343T New York Times Book Review, 213C, 232C New York Times Magazine, 374C New York Tribune, 62C, 116C
414
Index
New York University, 3 2 3 C New York World, 13OC, 158C New Zealand, 148C Ng, Fae Myenne, 43 2T Nga, Tran Thi, 400T Nice, Margaret Morse, 260T Nichols, Mary Sargent, 72T, 8ST Nicholson, Asenath Hatch, 69T Nicholson, Eliza Jane Poitevent, 115T Niedecker, Lorine, 333T Niemi, Judith, 401T Niggli, Josefina, 2581', 261T, 2 SOT, 284T Nin, Amis, 2S8T, 2901', 321T, 3S8T Nisa, 375T Nixon, Lucille M., 314T Nixon, Richard, 323-24C, 327C,337-38C Noble, Elaine, 345C Noda, Barbara, 366T Nolan, Jeanette Covert, 276T Nonfiction, 12T, 14T, 1ST, 20T, 2ST, 41T, 65T, 101T, 115T, 116T, 146T, 147T, 148T, 158T, 169T, 170T, 178-79T, 220T, 270T, 278T, 286C, 287T, 298T, 335T, 336T, 349T, 3S2T, 353T, 3S4T, 357T, 358T, 368T, 372T, 373T, 393T, 397-98T, 43IT advice books, 36T, 42T, 47T, 48T, 56T, 62T, 85C, 105T, 135T, HOT etiquette, 12--13C, 21ST anthologies, 48C, 84C, 102T, 113T, 133C, 139C, 171T, 177T, 241T, 391--92T, 413T, 43 8T antislavery writing, 52-53T, 55-56T, 57T, 84T, 99T, 326T autobiographies, 14T, 27T, S5T, 90T, 12ST, 130T,
134T, HOT, 149-50T, 154T, 158T, 161T, 167T, 167T, 175T, 179T, 185T, 188T, 194T, 234T, 234T, 242T, 243T, 243T, 244T, 245T, 246-47T, 253T, 254T, 256T, 261T, 262T, 263T, 264T, 268T, 27IT, 273T, 279T, 281T, 283T, 294T, 294-95T, 295T, 296T, 297T, 299T, 300T, 301T, 304T, 30ST, 306T, 31 IT, 313T, 316T, 317T, 325T, 326T, 329-30T, 33IT, 337T, 338T, 340T, 340-411', 342T, 346T, 35 IT, 364T, 368T, 370T, 371T, 373T, 374T, 3 SOT, 3 SOT, 383T, 384T, 389T, 393T, 398T, 398T, 413T, 416T, 418T, 42 IT, 42IT, 425T, 431-32T, 432T, 433T, 433T, 434T, 435-36T, 436T biographies, 60T, 107T, 107T, 13 IT, 132T, 150T, 152T, 187T, 200T, 225T, 230T, 248T, 269T, 282T, 284T, 289T, 300T, 302-303T, 316T, 326T, 336T, 338T, 342-43T, 354T, 374T, 384T, 393T, 410T, 424T, 42 8T, 43 5T captivity narratives, 12T, 22T cookbooks. See Food, cookbooks criticism, 195C, 222C, 238T, 264C, 276T, 292T, 302T, 316T, 317T, 329T, 332T, 355-S6T, 356-57T, 363T, 376T, 377T, 390T, 391-92T, 393T, 42 6T
diaries, 19T, 20T, 30T, 4445T, 47T, 56T, 56S7T, 7IT, 73T, 7374T, 77T, 79T, 82T, 97T, 9ST, 99T, 103T, HOT, 11ST, 115-16T, 12 IT, 159T, 171-72T, 172T, 177T, 180T, 18IT, 246T, 2S2T, 264T, 2S9T, 32 IT, 393T, 43 IT essays, 201T, 267T, 276T, 315T, 32 IT, 325T, 342T, 345T, 354T, 356T, 364T, 3651", 378T, 386T, 387T, 389C, 399T, 407T, 413T, 4141', 4I7T, 418T, 4331", 434T, 43 6T histories, 29T, 48T, 6970T, 70T, 12 IT, 157T, 158T, 187T, 203C, 205T, 207T, 22 IT, 225T, 239T, 241T, 27IT, 273T, 2S1T, 286C, 305T, 307T, 312-13T, 313T, 336T, 352T, 353T, 360T, 361T, 384T, 391T, 394T, 395-96T, 419T, 420T, 43 IT, 43ST letters, 24T, 26-27C, 40T, 55T, 78T, 101T, 105T, HOT, 115-16T, 13637T, 3441', 3581', 43 IT memoirs, 36T, 51T, 59T, 72T, 74T, 87T, 921', 101T, HOT, 138T, 152T, 156T, 161T, 175T, 180T, 1811', 187T, 194T, 206T, 234T, 238T, 253T, 255T, 2601", 261T, 265T, 280T, 304T, 306T, 307T, 31ST, 32IT, 326T, 328T, 329T, 342T, 352T, 357T, 361T, 370T, 373T, 391T, 400T, 402T, 405T, 407T,
Index 408T, 410T, 41 IT, 41 IT, 412T, 417T, 418T, 420T, 425T, 430-3 IT, 431-32T, 435T, 437T slave narratives, SOT, 5 IT, 75T, 90T, 97T, 98T, 103T, 106T, 129-30T, 142T, 145T travel writing, 25T, 29T, 46T, 65T, 74-75T, 93T, 98T, 107T, 117T, 122T, HOT, 159T, 160T, 166T, 180T, 182T, 188T, 265T, 306T, 315T Nonsexist Language, 378T • Norman, Marsha, 385T Normand, Mabel, 186C Norris, Kathleen, 218T, 43 2T North, Jane Caroline, 77T North, Jessica Nelson, 22 IT North, Oliver, 403 C North American Review, 40C The North Star, 68C Norton, Andre, 312T Norton, Carol, 232T Norton, Eleanor Holmes, 356-57C Norton, W. W. (publisher), 221C Norville, Deborah, 412C Novello, Dr. Antonia Coella, 415C Novels. See individual writers Nurses. See Medicine, nurses; Military, nurses Nutt, Emma M., 123C Nutting, Mary Adelaide, 176T Nye, Naomi Shihab, 379T Oakley, Annie, 132C Oates, Joyce Carol, 314T, 32IT, 323T, 329T, 333T, 339T, 343T, 353T, 370T, 379T, 390T, 400T, 404T, 40ST, 418T, 426T, 43 2T, 43 6T Oberlin College, 53-54C, 62C, 76C, 92C, 162C O'Brien, Margaret, 277C
O'Connor, Flannery, 28283T, 294T, 300T, 308T, 317T, 339T O'Connor, Sandra Day, 372C, 382C O'Hara, Mary, 27IT O'Keeffe, Georgia, 209-IOC, 227C
Okuba, Mine, 283T Older, Mrs. Fremont, 169T Olds, Sharon, 390T, 404T, 426T Olivarez, Graciela, 231C Olsen, Tillie, 310T, 347T, 362T Onassis, Aristotle, 326C Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy. See Kennedy (Onassis), Jacqueline O'Neill, Rose, 179T, 190C Ono, Yoko, 330C Opportunity, 209-10T Orchestras. See Music O'Reilly, Jane, 370T Orgain, Kate Alma, 177T Ornelas, Berta, 3SOT Ornithology, 260T Ortiz Gofer, Judith, 413T, 418T Osborn, Sarah, 20T, 36T Osgood, Frances Sargent, 60T Osgood, James R., 114C O'Shea, Madalyn, 2S4C Osteoporosis, 42 OC Ostriker, Alicia, 379T Ota, Shelley, 293T Otani, Janice, 384T Our Young Folk Magazine, 108T Outerbridge, Mary, 117C Overland Monthly, 107C Ovington, Mary White, 185T, 189T Owen, Belle, 169T Owen, Catherine, 135T Owen, Mrs. Henry, 69T Owen, Margaret B., 205C Owen, Mary Alicia, 149T, 170T Owen (Rohde), Ruth Bryan, 248C Owens, Rochelle, 312T
475
Oyama, Mary, 271-72T Ozick, Cynthia, 32 IT, 336T, 353T, 404T Pacifism. See Wars, antiwar Packard, Elizabeth Parsons Ware, 106T Page, Dorothy Myra, 245T Painters. See Artists, painters Paley, Grace, 306T, 310T, 333T, 347T, 395T, 42 6T Palmer, Gretta, 2 31C Palmer, Phoebe W., 65T, 92T Panama, 165C, 191C, 412C Pangborn, Georgia Wood, 167T Pankhurst, Emmeline, 191C Papanicolau, George Nicholas, 232-33C Papashvily, Helen Waite, 302T Parenting. See Children; Families; Motherhood Paretsky, Sara, 376T, 397T Park, Severna, 42 7T Parker, Bonnie, 252C Parker, Dorothy, 227T, 229T, 238T, 243T, 258T, 265T Parker, Gladys, 21 OC Parker, Theodore, 68-69C Parks, Rosa, 299C Parsons, Betty, 293C Parsons, Elsie Clews, 200T Parsons, Louella, 193T, 229T Parsons, Lucy Gonzalez, 132T Parties, Political. See Politics, parties Partisan Review, 252C Partnoy, Alicia, 406T Parton^ Dolly, 349C Parton, Sara Payson Willis ("Fanny Fern"), SOT, 83T, 85T, 87T, 89T, 92T, HOT, 113T Pastan, Linda, 3 SOT, 362T, 395T, 42 IT Patents. See Inventions Pattee, Fred Lewis, 195C Patten, Mrs. Joshua, 87C Patterson, Cissy, 2 51C
476
* Index
Patterson, Elaine, 264C Patton, Frances Gray, 297T Paul, Alice, 189C, 197C, 215C, 220C Pauley, Jane, 340C, 412C Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer, 54C, 60C, 94C Peabody, Josephine Preston, 1S7T, 169T, 182T Peace. See Wars, antiwar Peace Corps, 309C Peake, Elizabeth, 117T Peale, Sarah, 45C Pearce, Diana, 361C Peck, Annie, 187C Pendleton, Leila Amos, 187T Penguin Books, 255C Pennell, Rebecca Mann, 78C Pennington, Mary, 178C Pennsylvania Evening Post, 29C Penthouse Magazine, 329C, 388-89C People Magazine, 347C Peratrovich, Elizabeth, 280C Pereira, I. Rice, 250C Perkins, Frances, 248C Perkins, Josephine Amelia, 60C Perry, Lilla Cabot, 135T, 141T Persian Gulf War. See Wars, Persian Gulf War Peru, 84C, 187C Pesotta, Rose, 278T, 304T Peterkin, Julia, 223T, 229T, 238T, 246'F Peters, Lulu Flunt, 204T Peterson, Charles Jacobs, 64C Peterson's Magazine, 64C, 88T, 147C Peterson, Theophilus B., 66C Petty, Ann, 283T, 296T, 300T, 336T Pettengill, Lillian, 165T Phelps, Almira Hart, 57T, 70T Phelps (Ward), Elizabeth Stuart, 77-78T, 78T, SOT, 102T, 106T, 109C, HOT, 112T, 117T, 122T, 123T,
123T, 129T, 153T, 154T, 170T, 179T, 182T Philippines, 158C, 248C Phillips, Irna, 258T Phillips, Jayne Anne, 366T, 390T Phillips, Lena Madeson, 206C Philosophy, 172C, 184C, 292T, 303T, 313T, 3 3 IT Transcendentalism, 60C, 62T, 63C, 119T Photography, 142C, 169C, 173C, 182C, 19SC, 258C, 258C, 313T, 324-25C, 337T, 340C, 417C Phrenology, 59C Picasso, Pablo, 188T, 262T Pickett, Tydie, 244C Pidgin, Charles Felton, 162C Pierce, Franklin, 79C Pierce, Joann, 337C Piercy, Marge, 329T, 354T, 370T, 379T, 404T, 408T, 413T, 42 IT, 42 7T Pike, Mary ("Sidney A. Story, Jr."), 83T, 87T, 91T Pilgrims, 6C See also Settlements Pilots, 184C, 187C, 187-88C, 216-17C, 229C, 233C, 259C, 273-74C, 274C, 300C, 316C, 344C See also Airplanes; Military, pilots Pinckney, Eliza Lucas, 18C Pinckney, Josephine, 272T Pineda, Cecile, 395T Pinkham, Lydia, 120C Planned Parenthood, 26364C, 275C, 361C See also Abortion; Contraception Plath, Sylvia, 308T, 312T,
314T, 317T, 3 SOT, 374T, 379T Plato, Ann, 63T Playboy Magazine, 296C
Plays, 26T, 32C, 40T, 59T, 64T, 65T, 106T, 108T, 119T, 119T, 129T, 146T, 173T, 175T, 182T, 182T, 192T, 194T, 19SC, 197-98T, 205T, 206T, 207T, 211T, 212T, 214T, 220C, 222T, 226T, 228C, 230T, 232T, 234T, 236T, 237-38C, 238T, 243T, 244T, 248T, 2SOT, 2S2T, 254C, 257T, 259T, 264T, 270T, 277-78T, 284T, 284T, 286T, 289-90C, 292T, 295T, 299T, 303T, 305T, 312T, 316T, 322T, 335T, 336T, 341T, 345T, 3SIT, 351-52T, 353T, 356T, 361T, 365T, 367T, 37IT, 374C, 376T, 378T, 381-82T, 38ST, 388T, 393C, 408T, 409-10T, 42 2 C, 43 8T organizations, 146T theater, 16C, 20C, 32T Plummer, Nettie Arnold, 229T Pocahontas, 5C Pocket Books, 264C Poetry. See individual poets Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, 187T Pogrebin, Letty Cottin, 42 IT Pogson, Sara, 38T Poland, 204C, 250C, 26SC Police, 289T, 392C, 417C, 42 6C writing, 294T Polingaysi, Qoyawayma, 316T Politics, 10S-106C, 199200C, 316C, 345C, 3S7C, 392C parties, 34C, 62C, 71C, 81C, 147C, 165C, 197C, 200C, 257C, 335C, 3S3C, 369C presidents, 31C, 39C, 40C, 44C, 48C, 57C, 62C, 65C, 71C, 79C, 87C,
Index
95C, 106C, 113C, 121C, 131C, 132C, 138C, 154C, 165C, 171C, 177C, 187C, 197T, 197C, 206C, 213C, 222C, 233C, 244C, 245C, 258C, 269C, 278C, 279C, 286C, 310C, 316C, 337C, 353C, 387C, 388C, 403C, 408C, 427C, 43OT scandals, 337C, 337-38C, 347C, 403C, 434C voting, IOC, 21C, 94C, 105C, 109C, 113C, 115C, 118C, 185C, 196-97C, 211C, 270C, 294C, 316C, 318C, 332C, 355C, 369-70C, 409C See also Government Polk, Daphne, 264-65C Polk, James K., 65C Pollock, Jackson, 293C Polls, 182C, 2S7C, 260C, 263C, 281C, 310C, 319C, 330C, 332-33C, 333C, 344C, 352C, 367C, 373-74C, 387C, 388C, 399C, 401C, 410C, 411C, 415C, 416C, 422C, 423-24C, 435C, 436C Ponce, Mary Helen, 404T, 413T Ponce-Montoya, Juanita, 362T Pony Express, 94C Poor Richard's Almanac, 17C Popcorn, Faith, 398C Pope, Edith Everett Taylor, 232T Population, 7C, 13C, 14C, 17C, 20C, 32C, 42C, 49C, 62C, 73C, 93C, 109C, 12SC, 127C, 160C, 161C, 180C, 211C, 267C, 311C, 317C, 331C, 345C, 348C, 367C, 438C See also individual groups
Pornography, 323-24C, 330C, 372T, 377C, 392C anti-pornography, 381C Porter, Eleanor H., 189T Porter, Gene Stratton, 1707 IT, 179T Porter, Katherine Anne, 204C, 207C, 214C, 238T, 265T, 278T, 312T, 31ST Porter, Lavinia Honeyman, 182T Porter, Rose, HOT Porter, Sarah, 33T Pan Folio, 37C Portugal, 4C, 124C Post, Emily, 21ST Potts, Mary, 111C Pound, Louise, 21ST Poverty, 12C, 104C, HOC, 125-26C, 185-86T, 267C, 289C, 291C, 307C, 315C, 318C, 330C, 331C, 361C, 368C, 406C, 406C, 424C, 424C Powdermaker, Hortense, 248T, 290T Power, Susan, 43 6T Pratt, Minnie Bruce, 374T, 418T Preachers. See Religion, preachers Pregnancy, 62C, 81C, 158C, 159C, 182C, 236-37C, 255T, 268C, 289T, 289T, 349C, 352C, 401C, 420C, 421C, 423C, 425C postpartum depression, 137C See also Infertility; Childbirth; Medicine; Midwifery; Sterilization Preisand, Sally Jane, 339C Presidents. See Politics, presidents Presley, Elvis, 289C Presses. See Publishing Preston, Dr. Ann, 103C Preston, Harriet Waters, 11213T, 137T
-#77
Preston, Margaret Junkin, 8788T, 102T, HOT, 118T, 138T Price, Florence Beatrice Smith, 245C Price, Leontyne, 299C, 300C, 311C Primus, Pearl E., 42 2 C Prince, Mary, SOT Prince, Nancy, 74-7ST Princess Di. See Spencer, Lady Diana Princeton University, 352C Prisons, 5SC, SOT, 104C, 122C, 193-94C, 350C The Progressive Magazine, 180C Prohibition, 68C, 107C, 126C, 149C, 174-75C, 205C, 250C See also Temperance Property rights, 6C, IOC, 22C, 22C, 54C, 6061C, 70C, 74C, 102C Prose, Francine, 343T, 358T, 38ST, 400T Prostitution. See Employment Proulx, E. Annie, 433T Prouty, Olive Higgins, 2181' Provincial Freedom, 8 IT Pryse, Marjorie, 391-92T Psychiatry, 178C, 259T, 261T, 264T, 270T, 369T Psychology, 156C, 172C, 178T, 322T, 360T, 427-28T Public Ledger, 56C Public Opinion Quarterly, 260C Public Relations, 291-92C Publishers Weekly, 113-14C, 184-85C, 232C Publishing, 108T, 144C, 1545SC, 216C, 232C, 240-41T, 303C, 406T bookselling, 9C, 37C, 38C, 113T, 154C, 160C, 192C, 207C, 216C, 218-19C, 223C, 231C, 234C, 239C, 244^4SC, 278C, 381C, 431C copyright, 146C, 299-300C
478
Index
Publishing (continued) editing, 58T, 62T, HOT, 19 IT, 219C, 264C, 307C, 319C, 349C feminist presses, 328T, 333C, 335T, 374C firms, 40C, 41C, SIC, 52C, S3C, 66C, 68C, 69C, 75-76T, 79C, 80C, 89-90C, 116C, 126C, 134C, 147C, 157C, 1S8C, 162C, 203C, 207-208C, 218-19C, 221C, 226C, 234C, 251C, 25SC, 264C, 270C, 274-75C, 275C, 281C, 286C, 288C, 289C, 295C, 296C, 304C, 339C, 349C, 361C,374C mass, SOC, 66C, 129C, 132C, 135C, 14041C organizations, 20IT, 213C, 334C printers, 20C, 26C strikes, 251-S2C technology, 4C, 8C, 12C, 14C, 22C, 23C, 39C, 40C, 40C, 89C, 102C, 13SC, 171C unions, 2S1-S2C university presses, 108C, 1S4C, 207C, 259C writers' organizations, 142C, 1S9C, 170C, 177T, 187T Puck Magazine, 121C Puerto Ricans, 1S8C, 162C, 318C, 330C, 340C writing, 343T, 3SOT, 3S7T, 366T, 369T, 388T, 394-95T, 396-97T, 399T, 400T, 409T, 413T, 418T, 42 IT Pulitzer, Joseph, 130C, 1S8C Purse Press, 274C Purvis, Harriet, 119C Purvis, Katherine E., 154T Putnam, Emily James, 182T Putnam, G. P., 75-76T Putnam, Mary Lowell, 103T
Putnam, Sallie A., 104105T Putnam's Magazine, 81C, 107C, 183C Quakers. See Religion, Quakers Quayle, Dan, 42 7C Quimby, Harriet, 187C Quindlen, Anna, 427T, 436T Quinn, Terry, 39IT Quinton, Amelia S., 138T Racism, 11C, SBC, 70C, 89C, 91C, 102C, 103-104C, 105C, 109C, 114C, 125C, 134-35C, 150T, 158C, 176C, 197C, 201C, 201C, 206T, 215C, 226C, 241C, 244C, 259C, 262C, 263-64C, 265-66C, 281C, 287-88C, 297C, 313C, 318C, 324C, 326C, 330C anti-racism, 212C, 220T, 270C, 284T, 287-88C, 397C, 299C, 309C, 326-27C lynching, 141T, 147C, 148T, 153T, 18SC, 188C, 207C, 225T, 240C, 264C Radcliffe College, 150C, 170C, 177C, 215-16C, 216C, 360C Radio, 173C, 220C, 223C, 264C, 233T, 244T, 245C, 249C, 256C, 263C, 268T, 291C Radner, Gilda, 3SOC, 413T Radway, Janice, 390T Rainey, Barbara Ann Allen, 347C Rainier, Luise, 259C Rajan, Balachandra, 304T, 312T Ramo, Roberta Cooper, 43637C Ramos, Juanita, 404T Ramsey, Alice Huyler, 179C Ranck, Katherine Quintana, 379T
Rand, Ayn, 276T, 303T Rand, Ellen Emmet, 182C Randall, Margaret, 376T Random House, 226C Rankin, Jeanette Pickering, 200C, 325C Ranous, Dora Knowlton Thompson, 182T Ransom, John Crowe, 264C Rape, 103-104C, 207C, 241C, 309C, 339C, 350C, 357C, 361C, 365C, 382C, 411-12C, 415C, 42 6C See also Domestic Violence; Incest; Sexual Assault Rau, Santha Rama, 2 SOT, 310T, 333T Raugust, Mary Howell, 339T Ravenel, Beatrice Witte, 226T Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan, 261T Ray, Charlotte E., 114C Ray, H. Cordelia, 149T, 182T Raymond, Eleanor, 286C Reader's Digest, 219C Reagan, Nancy, 370C Reagan, Ronald, 369-70C, 387C, 388C Reconstruction, 121C, 147T See also Civil Rights; Government; Racism Red Cross, 128C, 170C Reed, Daniel, 238T Reed, Esther de Berdt, 27T Reese, Lizette Woodworth, 138T, 146T, 238T Religion, 8C, 12T, 1ST, 1ST, 19T, 20T, 25T, 39C, 41T, 55T, 56T, 64T, 67T, 84T, 98T, HOT, 118T, 12 IT, 124T, 13 IT, 143-44T, 148T, 153T, 173T, 175T, 192T, 221-22T, 293T, 323T, 392T African Methodist Episcopal Church, 40C Ba'hai, 166C Baptists, 127C, 135C Catholicism, HOT, 222T, 248C, 251C, 282C,
Index 282-83T, 300C; 303T, 333C, 344C, 350C Christian Science, 118T, 119C, 177T discrimination, 7-8C, IOC, 11C Episcopalian, 219C, 352C, 411C Evangelicalism, 45C, 49T, 84T, 134T, 149-50T, 228C, 364C Great Awakening, 17C Jehovah's Witnesses, 361T Judaism, 39T, 135C, 153T, 248C, 270C, 292C, 338C,392C See also Jewish Americans Mennonites, 170T, 177T Methodism, 22C, 181T Mormons, 49C, 117T, 132T, 143C, 1S5T New Age, 384T, 394T preachers, 76C, 79C, 92T, 94C, 116C, 129C, 13SC Quakers, IOC, 11C, 12C, 17C, 20T, 55-56T Shakers, 27-28C, 64T spirituality, 325T, 345T, 3SOC, 424T Religious writing. See Religion Reno, Janet, 43 OC Replansky, Naomi, 294T Repplier, Agnes, 177T Representatives. See Government, Congress Reproductive Technologies. See Childbirth; Infertility; Pregnancy Resnik, Judith, 398C Retail. See Employment, retail Revell, Louisa, 304T Reviewer, 242T Review of Reviews, 144C Revolts. See Riots; Slavery, revolts; Wars, revolts The Revolution, 107T Reyes, Myrna Pena, 3909 IT Rhodes, Jewell Parker, 43 3T Rhodesia, 209C Rice, Alice Hegan, 165T
Rice, Anne, 354T, 395T, 409T, 418T, 43 7T Rice, Craig. See Craig, Georgiana Ann Randolph Rice, John C, 15SC Rich, Adrienne, 9-10T, 293T, 314T, 343T, 354T, 362-63T, 366T, 374T, 400T, 43 3T Richards, Ann, 415C Richards, Ellen Swallow, 159C Richards, Laura E., 200T Richardson, Dorothy, 19 IT Richman, Julia, 135C Riddles, Libby, 393C Ride, Sally, 382C Rideout, Greta, 365C Rideout, Jane, 407C Ridge, Lola, 204T, 235-36T, 255T Riding, Laura, 261T Rimmer, Dorothy, 251-52C Rinehart, Mary Roberts, 17778T, 21ST, 226T, 236T, 243T Rios, Isabella, 3S4T Riots, 58-59C, 103-104C, 158C, 207C, 25SC, 275C, 318C, 318C, 327C, 328C, 426C See also Slavery, revolts; Wars, revolts Ripley, George, 63 C Ritchie, Anna Cora Mowatt, 67T, 88T, 90T Rittenhouse, Jessie B., 171T, 204T, 21ST, 239T, 2S3T Ritter, Frances (Fanny) Raymond, 119-20T, 123T Rivera, Marina, 3S8T Rives, Amelie, 139T, 148T Roaring Twenties, 164C Roberts, Elizabeth Madox, 227T, 230T, 239T, 246T, 261T, 268T, 272T Roberts, Jane, 32 IT Robertson, Alice M., 214C Robeson, Paul, 282T
* 479
Robins, Elizabeth, 17 IT Robins, Sally Nelson, 212T, 22 IT Robinson, Harriet Jane Hanson, 138T, 159T Robinson, Therese Albertine Louisa, SOT Rocha, Rina, 37 IT Rodgers, Dorothy, 281C Rodin, Judith, 431C Rogers, Rosemary, 347T Roiphe, Kate, 433T Roley, Susan Lynn, 337C Rolfe, John, 5C Rollins, Charlemae, 284T Romances, 147T, 161-62T, 199-2 DOT, 214T, 277T, 288C, 303C, 340T, 347T, 348T, 362T, 368T, 369T, 372T, 375T/383T, 386T, 390T, 396T, 402T, 410T, 414T, 43 8T Rood, Florence, 223C Roosevelt, Eleanor, 249T, 262T, 265-66C, 285C, 291-92C, 310C, 311C Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 245C, 2SOC, 258C, 269C, 270C, 273C, 278C Roosevelt, Theodore, 165C, 171C Rosca, Ninotchka, 334T, 385T Rose, Ernestine, 99C Rose, Henrietta, 91T Rose, Wendy, 343T, 358T Roseanne (Barr) (Arnold), 434C The Rosebud, S4T Rosen, Norma, 329T Rosenberg, Ethel Greenglass, 29SC Rosenberg, Julius, 29SC Ross, Betsy, 27C Ross, Diana, 328C Ross, Nellie Taylor, 225C Rossner, Judith, 3 SOT Rostetter, Alice, 207T
480 *
Index
Rourke, Constance, 243T Rowlandson, Mary, 12C, 12T Rowson, Susanna, 3 IT, 33T, 34T, 35C, 36T, 38T Royall, Anne Newport, 46T Royball, Rose Marie, 344T Royce, Sarah, 246T Rubin, Barbara Jo, 329C Rubin, Gayle, 35IT Rubinstein, Helena, 192C Rudd, Lydia Allen, 79T Rudolph, Wilma, 312C Ruffin, Elizabeth, 47T Ruffin, Josephine St. Pierre, 151T, 151-52C, 163C Rukeyser, Muriel, 255T, 287T, 363T Rule, Jane, 317T, 334T, 375T Rush, Rebecca, 39T Russ, Joanna, 35IT, 363T, 38ST, 391T, 404T Russell, Charlotte Murray, 260T, 286T Russell, Lillian, 187C Russia, 129T, 201C, 202C, 203T, 222T, 232T, 265C, 265C, 419C See also Soviets; USSR Sabine, Florence, 225C Sacajawea, 38C Sacco, Nicola, 214C, 236T Sage, Kay, 290C, 303T Saiki, Jessica, 4041" Saiki, Patsy Sumie, 358T St. James, Lyn, 43OC St. Johns, Adela Rogers, 32930T St. Lawrence University,
94C St. Martin's Press, 295C Salem Witch Trials, 13 C See also Witchcraft Salmon, Lucy Maynard, 1S7T, 22 IT Salter, Susanna Medora, 136C Salvation Army, 170C Sampson, Deborah Gannett, 128-9C Sampson, Edith Spurlock, 290C, 311C Sampson, Emma Speed, 204T
Sams, Doris, 276C Sanchez, Sonia, 326T, 334T, 344T, 39IT, 40ST Sanders, Dori, 418T, 433T Sanders, George, 265-66T San Diego State University, 328C Sandoz, Mari, 255-56T San Francisco Examiner, 126C San Francisco New World Sun, 271-72T Sanger, Margaret, 193T, 19394C, 197C, 198T, 215C, 220C, 227T, 234C, 235C, 236C, 237C, 262T Santayana, George, 184C Sapia, Yvonne, 42 IT Sarandon, Susan, 429C Sarton, May, 318T, 334T, 347T, 395T, 43 7T Sassy Magazine, 408C Satire, 67T, 68T, 121C, 17ST, 42 IT Saturday Evening Post, 43C, 214C Saturday Evening Quill, 20910T Saturday Review of Literature, 223C Saunders, Daphne. See Craig, Georgiana Ann Randolph Savage, Augusta, 259-60C Scarborough, Dorothy, 223T, 230T, 236T Schaeffer, Susan Frombcrg, 347T, 386T, 413T Schaw, Janet, 25T Schlafly, Phyllis Macalpin (Stewart), 376C Schmitt, Bernadotte E., 239T Schneiderman, Rose, 189C, 323T Schoolcraft, Jane Johnston, 46T Schools. See Education, schools Schroeder, Patricia, 403 C Schulman, Sarah, 391T, 414T, 43 7T Schwartz, Delmore, 405T
Schweitzer, Arlettc Rafferty, 42 3 C Science, 81C, 184C organizations, 69C scientists, 54C, 75-76C, 110-111C, 169-70C, 178C, 220C, 22SC, 239-40C, 316C, 383C, 407C, 409C Westinghouse Science Talent Search, 404C writing, 11OT Science Fiction, 192T, 206T, 229T, 236T, 289-90T, 312T, 31ST, 32S-26T, 329T, 336T, 344T, 346T, 3 5 IT, 3S4T, 359T, 360T, 360T, 363T, 364T, 365T, 367T, 372T, 388T, 391T, 398T, 399T, 40ST, 408T, 409T, 416T, 417T, 42 7T Utopian writing, 194T, 40 IT See also Fantasies Scopes, John, 225C Scotland, 204C Scott, Blanche, 184C Scott, Evelyn, 212T, 21 ST, 230T, 236T, 243T, 249T, 260T Scott, Marie, 207C Scott, Melissa, 405T Scribner, Charles, 68C Scribner's Monthly, 11 1C, 128C Scribners' Sons, 128C Scudder, Vida Dutton, 24344T Sculptors. See Artists, sculptors Seacole, Mary, 90T Seaman (Bechtel), Louise, 208C Scars, Roebuck, 1S2C, 212C Secretarial Services. See Employment, secretarial Sedgwick, Catharine Maria, 43 T, 44T, 47T, 49T, 55T, 57T, 59T, 66T, 68T, 70T, 90T, 43 3T See, Carolyn, 334T
Index Seeley, Catharine, 72T Segrest, Mab, 437T Seise, Marie, 69C Sellins, Fannie (Mooney), 206C Senate. See Government, Congress Seneca Falls, N.Y., 70C, 325C Sessions, Lucy, 7SC Seton, Anya, 272T, 279T, 339T Seton, Elizabeth Bayley, 39C, HOT, 350C Seton, Robert, HOT Settle, Mary Lee, 302T, 309T, 32IT, 363T, 371T, 414T Settlement Houses, 139C, 140C Settlements, 4C, 5C, 7C See also Pilgrims The Seven Arts, 197C Seventeen Magazine, 279C Sewers, 14C, 49C Sewing. See Needlework Sexism, 8C, 17C, 27C, 62C, 84C, 115C, 145-46T, 175-76C, 314T, 314C, 315-16C, 335C, 338C, 341C, 342C, 348C, 392C, 403C Sexton, Anne, 309T, 312T, 321T, 330T, 337T, 339T, 347T, 35 IT, 358T, 37ST, 395T, 43 7T Sexton, Linda Gray, 358T, 43 7T Sexual Assault, 264C, 285C, 330C, 376C, 422C, 435-36C See also Incest; Rape Sexual Harassment, 334C, 356-57C, 376C, 397C, 419-20C, 420C, 426C, 427C, 434C, 436C Sexuality, 8C, 29C, 136C, 145-46T, 156C, 182C, 190C, 193C, 219C, 222C, 227C, 227T, 228C, 234T, 235C, 251C, 259T, 279T,
289C, 295-96C, 31 IT, 314T, 330C, 344C, 3S2C, 366-67C, 37374C, 377C, 407C, 408C, 415T, 434C, 434T See also Homosexuality; Lesbianism; Masturbation Seymour, Mary Foot, 124C, HOT Shah of Iran, 366C Shakers. See Religion, Shakers Shameless Hussy Press, 328T Shange, Ntozake, 354T, 39ST, 437T Shaw, Anna Howard, 13SC, 170C Shaw, Artie, 262C Shearer, Norma, 240C Sheehan, Susan, 379-80T Sheehy, Gail, 354T, 422T Sheldon, Alice ("James Tiptree, Jr."), 344T, 363T Sherwood, Mary Elizabeth, 129T Shields, Carol, 437-38T Shields, Emma L., 262T Shockley, Ann Allen, 347T Short, Elizabeth, 285C Shostak, Marjorie, 37ST Shulman, Alix Kates, 339T, 363T, 375T, 405T Sickles, Dan, 92C Sidwa, Bapsi, 42 2T Siems, Ruth, 351C Signet Books, 286C Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society,
348T, 362-63T Sigourney, Lydia, 40T, 47T, S4T, 55T, 57T, 63T, 72T, 75T, 78T, 83T, 91T Silko, Leslie Marmon, 34748T, 358T, 37ST, 422T Silkwood, Karen, 346-47C Silva, Beverly, 400T Simmons, Amelie, 3ST Simmons, Nancy Craig, 43 IT
481
Simon, Kate, 306T, 3 SOT, 400T, 41ST Simon & Schuster, 224C Simons, Beryl, 268T Simpson, Eileen, 3 5 IT, 366T, 405T Simpson, Georgianna R., 216C Simpson, Lorna, 417C Simpson, Mona, 400T Simpson, Nicole Brown, 434C Simpson, O.J., 434C Sinclair, Bertha Muzzy ("B. M. Bower"), 17 IT Sinclair, Elizabeth, 302T Sinclair, Jo, 283T, 302T, 309T Singer, Isaac M., 77C Singers, 76C, 77-78C, 320C, 321C, 328C, 353C, 354C, 365C, 370T, 383C, 393C, 399C, 413C, 434C blues, 213-14C, 222C, 289C, 289-90C, 301T country, 229C, 255C, 26869C, 295C, 308C, 349C, 399C folk, 2S5C, 304C, 314C, 325T gospel, 281C jazz, 237-38C, 253T, 258C, 260C,262C opera, 174C, 195C, 2 IOC, 225C, 265-66C, 299C, 300C, 301T, 311C, 311C rock, 321C, 365C See also Music; Songs Singmaster, Elsie, 193T, 227T Skinner, Cornelia Otis, 226T, 286T Slater, Mrs. Samuel, 34C Slave Narratives. See Nonfiction, slave narratives Slavery, 6C, 8C, 11C, 14C, 20C, 22C, 24C, 38C, 41C, 42C, 43C, 4445C, 49C, 56C, 63C, 73-74C, 81C, 86C,
482 * Index Slavery (continued) 89C, 93C, 97C, 101C, 108C antislavery. See Abolitionism antislavery writing. See Abolitionism, publications; Nonfiction, antislavery writing; Nonfiction, slave narratives population, 14C, 20C, 49C, 93C revolts, 15C, 18C, 33C, 43C, SOC See also Abolitionism; African Americans; Africans; Racism Sledge, Linda Ching, 419T Slesinger, Tess, 253T, 256T Slew, Jenny, 22C Slonczewski, Joan, 401T Slosson, Annie Trumbull, 123T, 146T, 149T Slowe, Lucy Diggs, 201-202C The Smart Set, 144C Smedley, Agnes, 236T, 249T, 262T Smiley, Jane, 409T, 422T Smith, Amanda Berry, 14950T Smith, Anna Deavere, 422C, 43 8T Smith, Anna Young, 25T Smith, Barbara, 376T, 38 IT Smith, Bessie, 213-14C, 222C Smith, Betty, 253T Smith, Elizabeth Oakes, 64T, 70T Smith, Eliza Roxey Snow, 88T, 132T Smith, Ethyl, 169C Smith, Eunice, 33T, 34T Smith, Hannah Whitall, 118T Smith, John, 5C Smith,}. Pauline, 21ST Smith, Lee, 326T, 3 SOT, 386T, 409T, 414T, 42 7T Smith, Lillian, 279T, 287T Smith, Margaret Bayard, 44T, 48T Smith, Margaret Chase, 291C
Smith, Rosamond. See Gates, Joyce Carol Smith, Sophia, HOC Smith, William Kennedy, 42 6C Smith College, HOC, 148C, 177C, 360C Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll, 395-96T Snow, Lorenzo, 132T Socialism, 51C, 165C, 193T Social Security. See Government, benefits Social Work, 104C, 116C, 143C, 179C, 213C Sociology, 222C, 361C Solomon, Hannah Grcenebaum, 149C Sommers, 'Fish, 3SOC Sone, Monica, 296T Song, Cathy, 3801' Songs, 20C, 96T, 15IT, 164C, 167C, 172T, 221C, 279C composers, 149T, 154T songwriters, 259T See also Music; Singers Sonneschein, Rosa, 153T Sontag, Susan, 32 IT, 32425C, 358T, 363T, 414T, 427T Southerland, Elleasc, 366T Southern Literary Messenger, 54C Southern Quarterly Review, 63C Southworth, E.D.E.N., 66C, 69T, 74C, 78T, 79T, 86T, 88T, 90T, 92T, 99T, 101T, 109C, 122T, 129T, 132T Soviets, 206-207C, 29SC, 297C, 301C, 303C, 327C, 366C, 408C Soviet Union. See Russia; Soviets; USSR Space. See Astronauts Spain, 3C, 4C, 124C Civil War, 259C Spanish American War. See Wars, Spanish American War writing, 415T
Spalding, Eliza Hart, 56C Spear, Chloe, 5 IT Speck, Richard, 324C Speeches, 48C, 51C, 59C, 5960C, 77C, 91C, 94C, 192T Speed, Nell, 187T, 189T Spelman College, 127C Spellerini, Maria, 120C Spence, Eulalie, 230T Spencer, Anna Garlin, 189T Spencer, Anne, 210T Spencer, Lady Diana, 373C, 43 6C Spencer, Elizabeth, 287T, 309T, 323T, 339T, 375T Spencer, LaVyrle, 414T, 438T Spencer, Lilly Martin, 72C Spencer, Mary Etta, 215T Spencer, Sara Andrews, 119C Speyer, Leonora, 227-28T Spillcrs, Hortense J., 391-92T Spiritualism, 71C, 73C, 321T Spirituality. See Religion, spirituality Spock, Dr. Benjamin, 282C Spofford, Harriet Prescott, 94T, 100T, 101T, 113T, 129T, 15 IT, 157T, 160T, 162T, 212T Sports baseball, 209C, 276C, 346C basketball, 148C boxing, 42 6C canoeing, 40IT dog racing, 393C horseback riding, 85C, 184C horseracing, 18C, 329C, 334C jogging, 327C Olympics, 244C, 287C, 327C, 389C, 408C, 43 5 C reporters, 350C rodeo, 143C runners, 312C, 389C, 408C sailing, 296C, 329C, 393C scholarships, 344C skating, 192C, 324C, 435C
Index skiing, 287C swimming, 227C, 327C tennis, 117C, 155C, 201202C, 303C, 3IOC, 344C, 434-35C writing, 361C Stafford, Jean, 330T, 405T Stahl, Lesley, 340C Stalin, Josef, 230C, 297C Stanford University, 145C Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 62 C, 70C, 99C, 103C, 107T, 108C, 128T, 147C, 153T, 158T, 326T Stanwyck, Barbara, 21ST Starr, Belle, HOC Starr, Ellen Gates, HOC Stedman, Edmund, 133C, 139C Steel, Danielle, 375T, 386T, 396T Steele, Anna, 22T Stein, Gertrude, 1S7C, 176C, 179-80T, 188T, 19 IT, 193T, 207C, 218T, 226T, 246T, 2S3T, 2S6T, 258T, 262T, 268T, 2 SOT, 284T Stcinem, Gloria, 314T, 314C, 33SC, 336C, 386T, 42 7T, 43 8T Steloff, Frances, 244-45C Stephens, Ann Sophia, 59T, 64C, 65T, 66T, 83T, 86T, 88T, 90T, 9IT, 94-9ST, 100T, 101T, 109C Stephens, Harriet Marion Ward, 86T Mrs. Stephens' Illustrated New Monthly, 88T Sterilization, 176C, 330C, 338-39C, 352C, 35960C Stern, Edith W., 203C Stern, Elizabeth, 407C Stern, Elizabeth G., 200T, 22 8T Stern, William, 407C Stevens, Nettie, 169-70C Stevenson, Sarah, 121C Stewart, Maria, 55T, 124T
Stewart, Martha, SIC Stieglitz, Alfred, 188T Stinson, Katherine, 187-88C Stock Market. See Economics; Employment, stock market Stockton, Annis Boudinot, 2 IT Stoddard, Elizabeth Drew, 98T, 102T, 105T, 153T Stokes, Louise, 244C Stone, Goldie, 28IT Stone, Leslie F., 236T Stone, Lucy, 85C, 90C, 99C, 108C, HOT Stone, Ruth, 306T, 337T, 40ST Storms female names of, 365C Story Magazine, 241C Stout, Juanita Kidd, 305C Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 52C, 54T, 65T, 79T, 84T, 88T, 89-90C, 92T, 98T, 102T, 105T, 107T, 113T, 123T, 129T Strahan, Kay Cleaver, 232T Straight, Susan, 42 7T Streep, Meryl, 369C Street, Mary Dallas, 258T, 283T Street and Smith, 140-41C Streisand, Barbra, 354C, 434C Strikes. See Employment, strikes Strippers. See Employment, strippers Stroh's Brewery, 42 7C Strong, Anna Louise, 256T, 312T Stuart, Ruth McEnery, 150T, 15 IT, 154-55T, 157T, 167T Styron, William, 326C Suckow, Ruth, 253T Suddoth, Harriet Almaria Baker, 115-16T Suffrage, IOC, 27C, 31C, 31C, 62C, 70C, 76C, 90C, 108C, 113C,
483
115C, 116C, 118C, 119C, 127C, 131C, 134C, 142C, 143C, 147C, 148C, 162-63C, 167C, 170C, 174C, 177C, 181C, 183C, 185C, 186C, 187C, 189C, 190C, 191C, 197C, 200C, 200201 C, 204C, 209C, 2IOC, 220T, 220C, 325C, 361C anti-suffrage, 185C writing, SOT, 86T, 91T, 94T, 105T, 112T, 128T, 150T, 152T, 1S8T, 197T, 200T See also Feminism Sugimoto, Etsu Inagaki, 226T, 256T Suicide, 249T, 312C, 314T, 322-23C Suleri, 414T Sullivan, Kathryn, 388C Sung, Betty Lee, 323T Supreme Court, 123C, 19697C, 302C, 406C appointees, 402 C, 42 OC, 430 cases, 125C, 129C, 198C, 227C, 241C, 338C, 341C, 387C, 397C, 402C, 403C, 407C, 427C Adkins v. Children's Hospital, 220C Brad-well v. Illinois, 115C Brown v. Board of Education, 297C Davey v. Turner, 22C Dred Scott v. Sanford, 89C Frontiero v. Richardson, 341C GrisTvold v. Connecticut, 317C Harris v. McRae, 368C International Union v. Johnson Controls, 421C Loving v. Virginia, 324C Minor v. Happersett, 118C Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 281C
484 * Index SupremeCourt,cases(«ra£Hzz«.'4) Mullerv. Oregon, 177C Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 425C Plessy v. Ferguson, 154C Reynolds v. United States, "122C Roe v. Wade, 341C Rust v. Sullivan, 420C Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 360C Smith v. Allivrigbt, 278C Stowe v. Davis, 411C Taylor v. Louisiana, 348C United States v. Classic, 270C United States v. One Package, 257C Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 41011C West Coast Hotel v. Parrish, 257C Worcester v. Georgia, 5152C ' Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 13435C fugitive slave laws, 63C justices, 372C Surratt, Mary E., 102C Susann, Jacqueline, 322T, 344T Suspense Fiction, 27IT, 277T, 2891', 356T, 405T, 407T, 410T, 416T, 424T Sutton, Margaret, 246T Suyin, Han, 294T, 302T, 304T, 312T, 3 1ST, 31ST, 322T, 323T, 326T, 339T, 354T, 358T, 371T, 396T Swallow, Ellen, 110-111C Swenson, May, 298T, 304T, 315T, 363T, 422T Swift, Elizabeth Ann, 366C Swisshelm, Jane Grey, 125T Sze, Mai-mai, 279T, 28IT, 281T, 283T, 287T Tabankin, Margery Ann, 336C
Taber, Gladys Bagg, 260T, 268T Tafolla, Carmen, 386T Taft, Mrs. Josiah, 21C Taft, William Howard, 177C Taggard, Genevieve, 22 IT, 253T, 283T Tait, Agnes, 250C Tai-yi, Lin, 277T, 283T, 306T, 309T, 317T Talbert, Mary B., 198C, 215C, 218C Talbot, Marion, 128C Tallchief, Maria, 284C Tama, Tomoe, 314T Tamagawa, Kathleen Eldridge, 246-47T Tan, Amy, 414T, 422T Tanguay, Eva, 181C Tarbell, Ida, 167T, 171T Tardy, Mary T, 113T Tarnowcr, Herman, 368C Tartt, Donna, 427T Tatc, Allen, 405T Tate, Sharon, 329C Taverns, 8C See also Beverages Tavris, Carol, 427—28T Tax, Meredith, 3SOT, 396T Taylor, Anna Edson, 166C Taylor, Bayard, 94C Taylor, Elizabeth, 281C, 283C Taylor, Phoebe Atwood, 244T Taylor, Sheila Ortiz, 3SOT Taylor, Susie King, 167T Taylor, Zachary, 71C Taylor-Greenfield, Elizabeth, 77-78C Teasdale, Sara, 201T, 249T, 260T Tcish, Luisah, 396T Telemaque, Eleanor Wong, 363T Telephones, 120C, 122C, 123C, 196C, 324C Television, 228C, 229C, 282C, 291C, 292C, 298C, 311C, 313C, 317C, 32 1C, 327C, 334C, 344C, 350C, 354C, 362T, 404C, 426C, 427C, 434C
newscasters, 340C, 35253C, 353C, 389C, 412C Telkes, Maria, 286C Temperance, 72C, 8IT, 84T, 91T, 117C, 13 IT, 205C organizations, 123C See also Prohibition Tenney, Tabitha, 36T, 3637T Tepper, Sherri S., 409T Terhune, Mary ("Marion Harland"), 84T, 86T, 90T, 101T Terrell, Mary Church, 152C, 154C, 208-209C, 268T Terry, Hilda, 292-93C Terry, Lucy, 19T Terry, Megan, 322T Terry, Randall, 398C Tey-Rebolledo, Diana, 406T Thatcher, Molly Day, 249T Thaxter, Celia, 113T, 116T, 15IT Theater. See Plays Thomas, Alma, 354C Thomas, Clarence, 420C, 426T Thomas, Elizabeth Marshall, 433T Thomas, Evylyn, 156C Thomas, Joyce Carol, 386T Thomas, Martha Carey, 132C, 435T Thompson, Clara Ann, 178T Thompson, Clarissa Minnie, 134T Thompson, Dorothy, 247T, 260T Thompson, Eloise Bibb, 20910T Thompson, Hank, 295C Thompson, Dr. L. S., 103T Thompson, Priscilla Jane, 162T, 175T Thomson, Samuel, 43C Thornton, Willie May ("Big Mama"), 289C Thumb, Tom, 99C Thurman, Tracy, 392C Tiburi, Bonnie, 344C
Index Ticknor & Fields, 52C, 108T Tiempo-Torrevillas, Rowena, 371T Tillman, Katherine Davis, 182T Time Magazine, 221C, 264C, 283T, 334C Timothy, Elizabeth, 18C Tipton, Billy, 412C de Tocqueville, Alexis, 54C Todd, Mabel Loomis, 130T, 143T Toishigawa-Inouye, Bessie, 386T Toklas, Alice B., 176C, 246T, 298T, 315T, 344T Tomlin, Lily, 393C Tompkins, Jane, 391-92T Toth, Emily, 352T Tourtillot, Jane Gould, 98T Tovar, Ines Hernandez, 3S9T Town and Country, 173C Townsend, Virginia Frances, 91T Trades. See Employment Trail of Tears, 51-52C, 59C Trambley, Estela Portillo, 350T, 385T, 401T Transatlantic Cable, 91C Transcendentalism!. See Philosophy, Transcendentalism Transportation, 49C, 50C, 51C, 87C, 91C, 95C, 105C, 109C, 112C, 117C, 121C, 130C, 133C, 134C, 156C, 171C, 187C See also Automobiles; Bicycles Transsexuality. See Genderbending Transvestism. See Genderbending Travel Writing. See Nonfiction, travel writing Treadwell, Sophie, 232T, 272T Treason, 295C Trilling, Diana, 291C Trinh, Minh Due Hoai, 396T
Trist, Elizabeth House, 29T Trotsky, Leon, 230C, 267C Troxell, Janet Camp, 272T True Story Magazine, 208C Truitt, Anne, 313C, 3SOT Truman, Harry S., 278C, 279C, 285C, 286C, 287C, 314-15C Truth, Sojourner, 7ST, 77C Tse-Tung, Mao, 287C Tsuda, Margaret, 339T Tsui, Kitty, 386T Tubman, Harriet, 71C, 107T, 300T, 361C Tuchman, Barbara, 312-13T, 337T, 364C, 391T Tucker, Mary Logan, 187T Tucker, Sophie, 256C, 320C Tucker, William, 7C Tufty, Esther, 335-36C Turell, Jane Colman, 1ST Turnbull, Agnes Sligh, 285T Turner, Helen, 177C Turner, Lorenzo Dow, 24IT Turner, Nat, 50C Turner, Tina, 413 C Tuthill, Louisa Caroline, 66T, 70T, 88T TV Guide, 296C Twiggy, 324C Ty-Casper, Linda, 31ST, 326-27T, 396T Tyler, Anne, 396T, 409T, 422T Tyler, John, 62 C Tyson, Cicely, 313 C Tyson, Mike, 42 6C Uchida, Yoshiko, 3SOT, 405T Uhnak, Dorothy, 317T, 359T Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher, 419T Umbrellas, 24C Umpierre, Luz Maria, 366T, 396-97T Una, SOT Unemployment. See Employment, unemployment Union College of Law, 112C United Nations, 280C, 290C, 311C
485
Commission on Human Rights, 285C U.N. Decade for Women, 348C, 351C World Women's Conference, 391C Universal Pictures, 202C Universities. See Education, colleges and universities University of California, 16667C, 177C University of Chicago, 145C, 177C, 213C, 216C, 289T University of Iowa, 86C University of Montreal, 4IOC University of Pennsylvania, 178C, 431C University of Wisconsin, 177C Urbanization, 9SC, 112C, 12SC, 160C, 184C, 211C, 307C USA Today, 377C U.S. News and World Report, 249C USSR, 217C Utopian Communities, 119T, 281T Brook Farm, 63C Fruitlands, 64C Nashoba, 44-45C Oneida, 71C Utopian Writing. See Fantasies; Science Fiction Valdez, Gina, 375T Vampire Stories. See Gothic Fiction Van Buren, Martin, 57C Van Deman, Mrs. Ralph Henry, 179-80C Van Doren, Irita Bradford, 228C Van Duyn, Mona, 306T, 380T, 419T Vanity Fair Magazine,
190C,
2 IOC Van Meter, Vicki, 43 7C Van Vorst, Marie, 173T Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, 214C, 236T
486 * Index Vassar College, 102C, 110111C, 118C, 16ST, 224C, 360C Veblen, Thorstein, 160C Vega, Suzanne, 393C Velasquez, Loreta Janeta, 97C Velez, Diana, 409T Veney, Bethany, HOT Venning, Michael. See Craig, Georgians Ann Randolph Verne, Jules, HOC Vesey, Denmark, 43 C Vickery, Sukey, 37T Victor, Frances Fuller, 98T Victor, Metta Victoria Fuller, 8 IT, 84T, 88T, 95T, 97T, 103T, 12ST, 132T Victoria (queen of England), 57C Vida, Ginny, 359T Vidal, Marta, 337T Vietnam, 303C, 3 IOC, 317C, 322T, 325C, 327C, 327C, 339C, 342C memorial, 377C, 430C Vietnamese Americans writing, 396T, 400T Vigil, Evangelina, 363T, 38IT, 405T Viking Press, 226C, 349C Villa, Pancho, 189C, 198C Villanueva, Alma Luz, 359T, 409T, 42 8T Violet Press, 335T Viramontes, Helena Maria, 397T, 433T Virginia Military Institute, 421C Vogel, Paula, 414T Vogue Magazine, 147C, 173C, 182C Vorse, Mary Heaton, 195C, 2S6T Voting. See Politics Wade, Betsy, 342C Wagner, Jane, 393C Wagner-Martin, Linda, 43 8T Wagoner, Porter, 349C Wakefiekl, Ruth, 249C
Wakoski, Diane, 323T, 409T Wales, 204C Walker, Alice, 334T, 3S4T, 375T, 381T, 386T, 414T, 428T Walker, Madame C. J. (Sarah Breedlove), 183C Walker, Maggie Lena, 169C Walker, Margaret, 275T, 322T, 339T Walker, Dr. Mary Edwards, 103C, 357C Wallace, Michele, 363T, 419T Waller, Effie, 17 IT Walt, Hazel Hook, 198-99C Walters, Anna Lee, 397T, 42 8T Walters, Barbara, 352-S3C Ward, Maria E., 155T Ward, Nancy, 25C Warhol, Andy, 324-25C Warner, Anna, 86T, 95T, 113-14T Warner, Susan ("Elizabeth Wetherell"), 75-76T, 79T, 88T, 95T, 100T, 101T, 107T, 114T, 122T, 124T, 125T, 129T, 132T, 133T Warner Books, 339C Warner Corporation, 264C Warren, Mercy, 99C Warren, Mercy Otis, 24T, 26T, 3 IT, 32T, 38T Wars, 40C, 191C American Revolution, 26C, 28C Daughters of, 143C, 26566C Anti-Rent War, 60T antiwar activity, 27-28C, 194C, 196C, 212T, 215C, 249T, 280C, 322T, 322-23C, 325C, 327C, 333C, 368C battles Alamo, of the, 55C Britain, of, 267C bombing, 280C, 297C books, 199C, 199T, 271C, 272T, 276-77C, 278C
Civil War, 95C, 97C, 9899T, 99C, 103C, 104T, 104-105T Colonial war, SC Korean War, 292C, 29293T Mexican War, 68C, 73C organizations, 99C Native American wars, 7C, 11C, 20C, 41 C, 52C, SSC, 73C Persian Gulf War, 42 3 C, 424C Spanish-American War, 158C revolts Boston Tea Party, 25C Shays's Rebellion, 30C Vietnam. See Vietnam War of 1812, 39C World War I, 200C, 203C World War II, 196C, 250C, 265C, 269C, 271C, 273C, 274C writing, 69-70T, 10IT, 102T, 104T, 132-33T, 138T, 138-39T, HOT, 152T, 167T, 172T, 185T, 205T, 206T, 207T, 21 IT, 217T, 239T, 247T Washburn, Margaret Floy, 178T, 225C Washington, Booker T., 18687C Washington, George, 3 1C Washington, Margaret Murray, 186-87C Washington, Martha, 166C Washington Post, 122C Washington Times-Herald, 264C Wasserstein, Wendy, 3 5 IT, 376T, 409-10T Watanna, Onoto (Winnifred Eaton), 160T, 16566T, 167T, 169T, 17 IT, 174T, 175T, 182T, 188T, 194T, 219T, 227T Water Closet, 23C
Index Watergate, 338C Waters, Alice, 3 8 IT Waters, Ethel, 237-38C, 28990C Watkins, Yoko Kawashima, 397T Watson, Elizabeth M., 417C Watson-Schiitze, Eva, 169C, 182C Wattleton, Faye, 361C Waugh, Hilary, 294T Waung-ling, Betty Siao-meng, 351T Weapons rifles, 16C Weber, Julia, 283T Weber, Lois, 202C Webster, Jean, 188T Webster, Noah, 30-31C Weekly Reader, 23 IT Weeks, Rena, 43 6C Wei, Katherine, 391T Weigle, Marta, 406T Weld, Theodore, 58-59C Welfare. See Government, benefits Welles, Orson, 263C Wellesley College, 118C, 15 IT, 360C Wells, Carolyn, 168T, 180T, 189T Wells, Emmelme B., 1SST Wells, H. G., 263C Wells (Barnett), Ida B., 147C, 148T, 150T, 153T Wells, Jane, 114C Wells, Kitty, 29SC Welty, Eudora, 272T, 277T, 283T, 288T, 298T, 300T, 334T, 337T, 340T, 364T, 371T, 386T Wemple, Helen D., 262T West, Celeste, 414T West, Dorothy, 209-10T, 287T, 438T West, Jessamyn, 281T, 281T, 294T, 296T, 306T, 322T, 348T West, Mae, 228C, 231C, 247T, 306T, 324-25C
Wharton, Edith, 168T, 17 IT, 173T, 175T, 178T, 182T, 185T, 188T, 189T, 198T, 201T, 207C, 212T, 227T, 228T, 232T, 239T, 247T, 250T, 253T, 260T Wheatley, Phillis, 25T, 27T Wheeler, Mercy, 17T Whewell, William, 54C Whipper, Frances Anne Rollins ("Frank A. Rollin"), 107T Whitcher, Frances, 68T, 89T, 105T White, Bailey, 43 3T White, Barbara A., 391-92T WTiite, Caroline Earle, HOC White, Elizabeth, 1ST White, Ellen G, 173T White, Rhoda Elizabeth ("Uncle Ben"), 95T White, Tryphena Ely, 17172T Whitehead, Mary Beth, 407C Whiteman, Roberta Hill, 391T Whiting, Lilian, 157T Whitman, Narcissa, 56C Whitman, Sarah Helen, 8IT Whitmire, Kathy, 417C Whitney, Adeline Dutton Train, 100T, 102T, 116T Whitney, Eli, 33-34C Whitney, Elinor, 223C Whitney, Gertrude Vanderbilt, 241C Whitney, Phyllis A, 277T, 410T Whittesley, Abigail Goodrich, 53T Wiggin, Kate Douglas, 169T Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 120T Wilder, Laura Ingalls, 247T Wiley and Long, 53C Wiley, John, and Sons, 40C Wilhelm, Gale, 256T, 262T Wilkerson, Eliza, 60T Wilkes, Laura Eliza, 207T
487
Wilkinson, Sylvia, 322T, 323T, 359T, 381T Willard, Emma Hart, 39C, 42T, 43C, 326T Willard, Frances Elizabeth, 112C, 123C, 13 IT, 135T, 150T Williams, Catharine Read Arnold, 48T, SOT, 53T, 60T Williams, Patricia J., 422T Williams, Sherley Ann, 40IT Williams, Terry, 344C Williams, Vanessa, 388-89C Williams, William Carlos, 302T Williamson, Marianne, 42 8T Williamson, Sarah Eileen, 423C Williamson, Verna, 403C Wilmer, Elizabeth Lee, 404C Wilson, Edith Boiling, 206C Wilson, Harriet E., 93T Wilson, Jane, 300C Wilson, Margaret, 223T Wilson, Marjorie, 230T Wilson, Woodrow, 187C, 191C, 197C, 199C, 204C, 206C Winant, Fran, 335T Wine-Banks, Jill, 403C Winslow, Anna Green, 24T Winslow, Helen Maria, 180T Winslow, Ola Elizabeth, 268-69T Winsor, Kathleen, 279T Winthrop, John, 7C Wirt Benson, Mildred, 23940T Witchcraft, 9C, 11C, 13C, 13C Wolf, Emma, 162T Wolf, Naomi, 422T, 43 3T Wolff, Mary Evaline (Sister Mary Madeleva), 22122T Wollstonecraft, Mary, 34C The Woman Rebel, 193T Woman's Advocate, 86T Woman's Day Magazine, 259C The Woman's Era, 15IT
488 * Index Woman's Home Companion, 117C Woman's Journal, HOT, 11920T
Womanspirit Magazine, 345T Woman's Rights. See Feminism; Suffrage Women of Color organizations, 373C, 421C See also individual ethnicities and races Women's History Month, 368C Women's Press Collective, 33ST See also Publishing, feminist presses Women's Studies, 328C,
355C, 355-S6C, 381C Sec also Feminism Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 337T Wong, Jade Snow, 28IT, 351T Wong, May, 330T, 364T Wong, Nellie, 3S9T, 391T Wong, Su-ling, 294-95T Woo, Merle, 37IT Wood, Kimba, 43OC Wood, Lillian E, 219T Wood, Sally, 36T, 37T, 38T Woodhull, Victoria, 113C Woodhull and Claflin 's Weekly, 113C Woodiwiss, Kathleen E,., 340T, 348T Woodruff, Judy, 340C
Woodstock Music and Arts Fair, 329C Woolf, Virginia, 234C Woolley, Mary Emma, 165C, 175C Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey, 114T Woolson, Constance Fenimore, 98T, 1 3 IT, 153T Woolworth, F. W., 190C World's Fairs, 149C, 1 SOT, 226C, 2S9-60C, 26SC World War I. See Wars, World War I World War II. See Wars, World War II Wormeley, Katharine Prescott, HOT Wright, Frances ("Fanny"), 42T, 44-45C, 48C, 49T Wright, Mabel Osgood, 166T Wright, Orvillc, 169C Wright, Patience Lovell, 2425C Wright, Wilbur, 169C, 17980C Wright, Zara, 212T Wriglitman, Carol, 42 8T Writer's Organizations. See Publishing, organizations Wu, Chien-Shiung, 316C Wurdemann, Audrey, 253T Wyatt, Edith Franklin, 166T, 169T, 185-86T, 201T Wylie, Elinor, 144C, 216T, 222T, 233T, 247T Wyman, Mary Alice, 230T
Yale University, 145C, 352C Yalow, Rosalyn, 357C Yamada, Mitsuye, 355T, 41OT Yamamoto, Hisaye, 288T, 295T, 410T Yamauchi, Wakako, 322T, 3 7 IT Yeats, William Butler, 144C Yen, Liang, 300T Yen, Maria, 298T Yezierska, Anzia, 212-13T, 222T, 227T, 290T YM Magazine, 269C Youmans, Eliza Ann, HOT Young, Collier, 288-89C Young, EllaFlagg, 181C Young, Lester, 253T Young, Marguerite, 26IT,
279T, 28IT, 31ST, 43 8T Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA), 90-91C, 323C Youth's Companion, 47C Yun, Tan, 277T Yurka, Blanche, 220C
Zaharias, Mildred Ella ("Babe") Didrikson, 244C Zakrzcwska, Maria, 91-92C Zamora, Bernice, 3SST Zaturenska, Marya, 262T Zolotow, Charlotte, 3 1ST Zorach, Marguerite Thompson, 226C Zugsmith, Leane, 236T, 262T