Wild women : crusaders, curmudgeons, and completely corsetless ladies in the otherwise virtuous Victorian era

by Autumn Stephens

Paper Book, 1992

Status

Available

Barcode

10022

Publication

Berkeley, CA : Conari Press, c1992.

Description

"Enjoy a fascinating and sometimes humorous glimpse into the lives of over one hundred, 19th-century Victorian era American women who refused to whittle themselves down to the Victorian model of proper womanhood. Included in Wild Women are 50-black-and-white photos from the era. During the Victorian era a woman's pedestal was her prison. "Women should not be expected to write, or fight, or build, or compose scores. She does all by inspiring man to do all."--Ralph Waldo Emerson "There is nothing more dangerous for a young woman than to rely chiefly upon her intellectual powers, her wit, her imagination, her fancy." - Godey's Lady's Book magazine But, scores of nineteenth-century American women chose to live life on their terms. In this book you will meet women who refused to remain on a Victorian pedestal. In San Francisco a courtesan appeared as a plaintiff in court, suing her clients for fraud. In Montana a laundress in her seventies decked a gentleman who refused to pay his bill. A forty-three-year-old schoolteacher plunged down Niagara Falls in a wooden barrel. A frail lighthouse keeper pulled twenty-two sinking sailors out of the ocean off Rhode Island. A pair of Colorado madams fought a public pistol duel over their mutual beau. Two lady lovebirds were legally wed in Michigan. An ad hoc abolitionist spirited away scores of slaves on the Underground Railroad. A Secessionist spy swallowed a secret message as she was arrested, claiming that no one could capture her soul"--… (more)

Original publication date

1992

Physical description

249 p.; 18 cm

User reviews

LibraryThing member streamsong
This book has a lot right with it. There are short biographical sketches (the longest are two pages) of one hundred fifty women who followed their own paths in the Victorian era (1837-1901). There are authors, dancers, notorious outlaws and madames, sufragettes, doctors, an astronomer and clergy
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women. Some of these women I am familiar with: outlaw Belle Starr, Louisa May Alcott, Emily Dickinson, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman. Others are less well known and I was happy to make their acquaintance: well known photographer Frances Johnston, who chose to do her self-portrait (the cover photo of the book) with cigarette, beer stein, a bit of leg and an intense posture.

A web site proclaims this book and its sequels to be the basis of 'Wild Women Clubs' throughout the world.

The author, however, carries the silly alliteration of the title into almost every paragraph of the book. What's quirky and fun in the title got old quickly in the context of the entire book.
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LibraryThing member rampaginglibrarian
This is a fun little book of stories and anecdotes and quotes from the wild women series--i'm not sure about the authority index though because some of it smacks of apocropha/urban legend and i like to know whereof i speak although sometimes truth and fact can ruin a good story.
LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
I just can't read books like this - two small pages for each woman is not enough and I'd rather get to know a few than taste a lot. Maybe it'd be a good reference for an upper-level history classroom - each student could choose one woman to research.
LibraryThing member whitreidtan
If you say "Victorian women," I can probably guess exactly what you mean. We have a stereotype of Victorian women as proper, prudish women who take care of their husbands and children, whose focus is only on the home and the so-called womanly sphere. But this pop culture portrayal certainly doesn't
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include all women. In fact, the women of the era whom we have most likely heard of, with the possible exception of Queen Victoria herself (although even she apparently wasn't nearly as stiff and unhumorous as the popular picture would imply), are all women who most assuredly did not follow the strictures of the age. Autumn Stephens's Wild Women offers brief biographies of some of the women who fought against this straight-laced and rather uninteresting expectation and lived life on their own terms.

This collection of very short biographical blurbs is organized by the transgressions the women committed against the expectations of their sex. With cheesy alliterative chapters like Dreaded Desperados and Gutsy Gamblers, Holy Terrors and Pope Perturbers, Flamboyant Flirts and Lascivious Libertines, and so forth, the 150 biographies focus on the scandalous aspect of each women that best fits the chapter category. This makes many of the women within each chapter start to sound the same. In fact, even across the chapters the brevity of the biographies make the women sound similar. There are only so many ways to rebel against the "Angel in the House" trope but the sameness is highlighted by featuring so many women in so short a space. Stephens' tone is quite glib as she describes these women and it is difficult to figure out how the author determined which women to include as not all of them are nearly as notable as the others. Some of the women are very well known while others are quite unknown. The women profiled here are primarily American women of European descent and one blurb about a woman who contested her father's will for fifty years, only winning the case six years after her own demise is repeated twice within the pages. Given the nature of the book and the lack of in depth information (both intentional), this is really more a book to dip into and out of rather than to sit and read in one go. It was a decent enough diversion but no more than that.
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Pages

249

Rating

½ (17 ratings; 3.8)
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