Portia: The World of Abigail AdamsIndiana University Press, 1995 - 227 páginas Annotation Here, at last, Is the biography that Abigail Adams has long seservedone that puts her, rather than her husband, at its center, and which interprets her life in light of both its eighteenth-century context and recent feminist scholarship. Gelles brings new insights to familiar topics like the Adamss marriage and Abigails wartime role; explains more fully than previous scholars such incidents as the failed courtship of Royall Tyler and Abigail Junior; and examines with sensitivity hitherto little-known episodes like that of Abigails epistolary flirtation with James Lovell during the Revolution or Abigail Juniors mastectomy in 1811. In short, this is a remarkable achievement, far surpassing all earlier attempts to capture the essence of the woman who was one of early Americas greatest letter-writers. Mary Beth Norton Edith Gelles has written a deeply interesting book about Abigail Adams. ... she is careful to reconstruct the eighteenth-century environment of Abigail Adams. De. Gelles is a careful historian of eighteenth-century America and a thoughtful biographer. She has given us a fresh examination of Abigail Adams which will stimulate in helpful ways additional research and discussion. Robert Middlekauf In this important and fascinating biography, Edith Gelles not only restores Abigail Adams to her rightful place at the center of her own story, she challenges the creaky conventions of traditional male-defined biography. Portia breaks ranks with the biographers twiceby refusing to treat Abigail Adams as a reflection of her husband and by refusing to force her lifes story into an artificially linear narrative. In this masterful work, Edith Gelles reconceptualizes and revolutionizes the very notion of biography by capturing experience as it truly unfolds in so many womens livesas a collage of overlapping and circular impressions and feelings, rather than a relentless climb up a ladder of public ambition. Susan Faludi The best biography of Abigail Adams in print. By keeping the spotlight on Mrs. Adams and sensitively evaluating her in eighteenth-century terms, Edith Gelles provides the most rounded portrait yet of this important woman. Patricia U. Bonomi Edith B. Gelles uses the revolutionary years as the backdrop of this sensitive study, And The political events as the drama in which the players act out well-defined roles. ... [Gelless] story of relationships, networks, and power in the context of Abigails eighteenth-century world is truly a superb accomplishment. American Historical Review Adamss strength, courage, and wit ... emerge more fully than they have in any previous work. ... [Gelles] has succeeded in providing a well-rounded portrait of a remarkable figure. Choice Portia ... Is a refreshing change of pace. ... [Edith Gelles] is affectionate yet scholarly, determined to present Adams as a strong character who was very much a woman of her time, not merely a liberated precursor to feminism or the little wife behind the great man. San Francisco Chronicle Portia, The first woman-centered biography of Abigail Adams, details the issues, events, and relationships that informed Adamss life. The portrait that emerges also describes women like her during the Revolutionary era. Much of Abigail Adamss independent reputation derives from the letters that she wrote for over a half-century. Personal and eloquent, they provide unusual access to her private life and capture the social conventions, politics, and people of her age. The letters describe her domestic sphererelationships with her sisters, her daughter and sons, and friends such as Thomas Jefferson. Her marriage to John Adams is considered in the context of the patria. |
Contenido
The Abigail Industry | 1 |
a tye more binding | 24 |
Domestic Patriotism | 37 |
A Virtuous Affair | 57 |
Gossip | 72 |
Faithful Are the Wounds of a Friend | 86 |
The Threefold Cord | 104 |
Mother and Citizen | 133 |
My Closest Companion | 150 |
Epilogue | 173 |
213 | |
225 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
AA to JQA Abigail Adams Abigail Adams Smith Abigail and John Abigail Junior Abigail Smith Abigail wrote Abigail's letters Adams Family Adams Papers Adamses American Revolution became behavior Benjamin Rush biography Boston Braintree breast Cambridge cancer Cappon century character Charles Francis Adams Continental Congress correspondence Culture daughter death described domestic eighteenth eighteenth-century Elizabeth England father female feminist friends friendship gender gossip Hereafter cited historians husband Ibid ideology issue James Lovell John Adams John Quincy Adams John's July L. H. Butterfield lives marriage married Mary Cranch Mercy Otis Warren moral mother Musto Nabby Nagel parents political president Puritan Reel reflected relationship Religion republican response Revolutionary role Royall Tyler Sept Shaw sisterhood sisters social sphere story Thomas Jefferson tion wife William Stephens Smith woman women writing wrote to John York young Abigail