Kathryn Kish Sklar
Catharine Beecher
A Study in American Domesticity
"A thoughtful, ingenious, speculative book, a pleasure to read and to reread.
No one interested in the history of women and the family, and in Victorian civilization
as a whole, can afford to miss it." Journal of American History
Although she is often remembered only as the sister of Harriet Beecher Stowe
and Henry Ward Beecher, there was a time in Catharine Beecher's life when she
was more widely known than any member of her eminent family. A pioneering teacher,
a writer on moral and religious topics, and an avid publicist for women's education,
her name became a household word in the 1840s because of the enormous success
of her Treatise on Domestic Economy. This comprehensive guide to all aspects
of domestic self-management was part of her effort to create a female domain from
which cultural power could be exercised.
In the recent reassessment of the historical experience of women, the middle decades
of the nineteenth century have emerged as a critical period: the movement for
women's rights was born, and the genteel cult of the lady and the encumbering
customs of domesticity took hold. Present-day attitudes about the family and
images of masculine and feminine roles are still strongly sshpaed by nineteenth-century
ideas. This book examines that era through the life of one of its major protagonists.
It offers new insights into the shifting contours of the nineteenth-century
female experience and is a signal contribution to the intellectual and social
history of the period.
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