EXCELLENT
The lasting legacy of misbehavior.
In her latest work, Harvard historian Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
reclaims the famous saying she penned in a 1978 academic article and
traces the paths of "misbehaving" women throughout history.
Focusing on the lives and works of three women in
particular--15th-century French poet Christine de Pizan, 19th-century
American activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and 20th-century English
novelist Virginia Woolf--Ulrich interweaves the experiences of countless
other mythical, fictional, and real-life women. She explores and
documents such diverse elements as the concept of women warriors, the
daily drudgery of housework in a medieval home, and the parallels
between slavery and the subjugation of the female. In each chapter, she
demonstrates how brave women who are willing to stand up to society make
progress.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Knopf. 320 pages. $24. ISBN: 1400041597
NY Times Book Review EXCELLENT
"Ulrich's new book is a work of selection and synthesis;
she finds common archetypes in far-flung sources, making connections
that are sometimes distant but never tenuous. ... Because Ulrich's
extensive research allows her to make imaginative leaps, spanning
centuries and continents, the reader accepts that she occasionally
forces coherence onto unwieldy material, resorting to the overly careful
formula of academic papers, rehearsing established connections before
introducing new ones." KATHRYN HARISON
Providence Journal EXCELLENT
"She has an infectious enthusiasm for history and a powerful
ability to convey it. Ulrich is a tremendous teacher, one who expresses
herself clearly and beautifully (without a trace of jargon-larded
academese), who weaves disparate stories into seamless wholes, who
relates history and contemplates its uses and users with equal
brilliance." MARK DUNKELMAN
Washington Times EXCELLENT
"Ms. Ulrich writes with deep insight and humor about subjects
that touch our daily lives, starting with housework. ... Ms. Ulrich does
not hide the fact that she is and always has been a feminist, but
whether she is discussing de Pizan's Amazons, one of the most
delightful sections of the book, or Woolf's fictionalized story
about Shakespeare's sister, common sense and fairness abound."
CAROL HERMAN
Boston Globe
EXCELLENT
"Ulrich's sweeping style runs a discomforting historical
risk that the reader, not unlike Stanton herself, may lose sight of the
very real differences that inescapably separate the heroines Ulrich
surveys. Still, if anyone has the right--and the grace--to glide through
these historical panoramas and find lost threads of connection, it is
this author." SHARON ULMAN
San Antonio Exp-News
EXCELLENT
"For some readers, the dense material might be aided by
[Ulrich's] repetition of statements and redundant summaries. ...
Like history, this book should not be passed up but passed along."
MELISSA MEDORE-MOORE
Washington Post
EXCELLENT
"Don't worry: Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History is
by no means jargon-ridden or academic in tone. ... Despite many virtues,
Ulrich's book nonetheless often feels less like history than
ancient history. A lot in its pages will be familiar to readers."
MICHAEL DIRDA
Cleveland Plain Dealer GOOD
"At times, Ulrich is uneven drawing us into her professional
passion. Her deconstruction of the religious and mythic symbolism in de
Pizan's The Book of the City of Ladies is dull, but her explanation
of how women's lives must be prised from the offhand details left
in the records of men is engaging." Sharon Broussard
CRITICAL SUMMARY
Unlike her previous works, which focused on a single location, era,
or life, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's fifth work of nonfiction takes a
broad view of women's history. Though critics felt that her
associations and organizing devices were clever, a few questioned some
of the connections between stories. Critics also diverged over
Ulrich's style: some found it dry and academic; others considered
it clear and compelling. Ulrich, a pioneer in women's history in
the 1970s and 1980s, continues to produce works that provide a
fascinating peek into the past--into what a woman's life was, and
might still be, were it not for these spirited pioneers whose stories
deserve to be remembered.
RELATED ARTICLE: ALSO BY THE AUTHOR
A MIDWIFE'S TALE The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her
Diary, 1785-1812 (1990): * PULITZER PRIZE. This tale of an otherwise
ordinary midwife and herbalist in rural 18th-century New England reveals
with shocking detail the truth about daily life and medicine in the
early years of the Republic.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
GOOD WIVES Image and Reality in the Lives of Women in Northern New
England, 1650-1750 (1982): In this thoughtprovoking book, Ulrich
breathes new life into the forgotten lives of the "goodwives"
of Colonial America--their beliefs and concerns, their hopes and fears,
their pleasures and hardships, and their never-ending duty to church,
home, husband, and children.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
By Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
COPYRIGHT 2008 Bookmarks Publishing
LLC Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.