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Posts from the ‘reading list’ Category

More to read on divorce in the Progressive Era

I posted here about one aspect of the 1902 McAllister–Young divorce and subsequent custody battle, and offered up a single lonely suggestion for further reading: ‘Divorce in the Progressive Era’, a 1965 paper by William O’Neill. Recently I’ve found more, so here’s a list:

  • Nelson M Blake: The Road to Reno (1962)
  • William O’Neill: Divorce in the Progressive Era (1967; this is a book with the same title as his paper)
  • Elaine Tyler May: Great Expectations: Marriage and Divorce in Post-Victorian America (1980)
  • Norma Basch: In the Eyes of the Law: Women, Marriage, and Property in Nineteenth-Century New York (1982)

I haven’t read these yet, but reviews show that May’s book challenges the conclusions of O’Neill’s book pretty strongly, and that O’Neill in turn considers May’s book deeply flawed. His opinion is on record because the mischief-makers at the Journal of Social History got him to review it, surely knowing full well that cutting remarks would be made. And they were: “Elaine Tyler May’s book will disappoint [...] In her defense it must be said that divorce is harder to study than might at first be supposed.”

Other reviews by people without any obvious axes to grind are more positive, and make the nature of the disagreement clearer: “May not only attacks William O’Neill’s idea that divorce was an aspect of women’s emancipation, but stands it on its head. Divorces increased, she maintains, because men and women entertained mounting expectations of marital bliss, only to be disappointed (her argument does not invalidate, however, O’Neill’s contention that divorce – as the alternative to separation – actually strengthened the institution of marriage).” (Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, Journal of American Studies)

I found the Basch book reviewed by May, and thought it sounded relevant to the McAllister–Young situation; I don’t know how useful it would be to someone with a more general interest. I’m more drawn towards May and Basch because their books are more recent (and because they’re women, I suppose), but I’ll also look out the O’Neill. Not sure about Blake; all I know of his book is that O’Neill cites it as a general work predating his own.

Now some papers:

No doubt there’s more out there, but these are the ones I’m working my way through at the time of writing.

What I’m reading next (mostly about war and witch trials)

Just a quick little update here, in case anyone is puzzled about the focus of the blog shifting away from colonial America over the past week or two without explanation. Read more

Hidden from History hidden from library users

When I started this blog I was planning to read Sheila Rowbotham‘s Hidden from History, a feminist text which, it had been suggested to me, was perfect for a family history researcher interested in women.

I found the book in our city library’s online catalogue and logged a reservation for it. It usually takes no more than a week or two for a book to turn up at my branch, unless there’s a long queue of reservations. Weeks passed, and I began to wonder. More weeks passed, and I visited the branch in person to find out what was up. Read more

More by Jill Lepore

I thought it might be worth looking up Jill Lepore, the Harvard professor who wrote the NYT op-ed piece I linked to here yesterday; and lo, I now have several more items on my reading list. Read more

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