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the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Monthly Archives: February 2011

from the archives: the 1920s culture war

08 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in my historian hat

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feminism, MHS, politics, religion

Over at the Massachusetts Historical Society website, the object of the month for February 2011 is an item I selected and wrote up. The object is a letter from a conservative Nebraska clergyman to an anticommunist, antifeminist political activist who lived in Massachusetts. Reverand Birmingham wrote Margaret Robinson in hopes that the two might work together to combat the evils of women’s higher education:

In May of 1923, conservative evangelical minister, author, and lecturer Thomas M. C. Birmingham saw a brief announcement in an Omaha newspaper, describing a lecture given by Margaret C. Robinson, president of the Massachusetts Public Interests League, on the “radical propaganda” Robinson and her fellow activists believed was being disseminated in women’s colleges.

Professors at women’s colleges such as Bryn Mawr, Smith, and Wellesley, Robinson argued, were turning “wholesome American girl[s]” away from patriotism and the Constitution, preaching “Communist sex standards,” calling the literal truth of the Bible into question, and exposing young women to the theories of Freud and Marx.  As a result, unsuspecting parents sent their daughters off to college and watched in horror as their child was transformed into “an undesirable type of citizen.”

This message resonated with Birmingham, who wrote to Robinson, suggesting that the two activists might find “mutual helpfulness” in an alliance to “stamp out radicalism.”

You can read the rest of my write-up and a full transcript of the two-page letter over at the MHS object of the month page.

The MHS is known for its 18th and 19th Century American holdings, and it has long had a reputation for holding documents related to the New England elite. Part of what I’m trying to bring to my work as a reference librarian is greater knowledge of the ways in which the MHS collections can inform research in less-obvious areas (i.e. my own areas of interest!) such as the history of sexuality, the history of gender, history of activism (left, right, and center) and 20th-century subjects. 

I picked this letter a few months ago to research and write up because I think it’s valuable to remember that folks like those in the Tea Party movement are not the first populist conservative activists to wrestle with their more progressive adversaries over what it means to be an American and what exactly constitutes American values. I’m also fascinated by antifeminist women and how they understand themselves in relation to gender and women’s rights movements. Female activists who campaigned against feminism while deploying tactics and rhetoric similar to their feminist contemporaries can further our understanding of how individuals understand their own gender identity and how gender roles relate to the state and social order.

Anyway. Hop on over to the MHS website and check out the whole thing.

harpy week: sex and identity, sex and the law, and asexual sensuality

06 Sunday Feb 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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harpyness

This week at The Pursuit of Harpyness marked the start of my second month of group blogging. Not sure if these weekly round-ups are of any use to y’all … feedback is welcome!

I don’t want to be redundant if anyone who cares is just following the Harpy blog. But I also don’t want to leave folks out who want to keep up with what I’m writing, but don’t necessarily want to follow a group blog. So please do let me know if you have strong feelings one way or another!

  • Harpy reader Jess left a comment on my post from a few weeks back about sexual fluidity asking folks who identify as sex- or gender-exclusive in their sexual desires to talk a bit about what that feels like. I turned her question into a new post which generated a really interesting discussion in comments.
  • On Wednesday, I posted a review of From the Closet to the Courtroom, a book on LGBT rights and the law. I’m planning on making Wednesday a regular book review day for the forseeable future, as I’ve been reading a number of books that I think will be of interest to the gender/sexuality crowd.
  • And Thursday, I gave a signal boost to my friend Minerva who wrote an eloquent blog post about language and identity and how she understands sensuality in the context of her asexual identity.

The other Harpy writers were busy also, posting about separate sleeping arrangement for married couples (another really interesting comment thread) and the Republican’s attempt to legally narrow the definition of “rape” within the context of healthcare reform. Hop on over the The Pursuit of Harpyness and check out (or even become part of!) the conversations.

from the archives: reflections on month-the-first

03 Thursday Feb 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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history, MHS

I’ve been in my new position at the Massachusetts Historical Society for about a month now, and things are still a mix of old and new. In part because I’m still part of the library staff, and the substantial (and most important!) part of my job hasn’t changed: I spend my days helping patrons find the stuff that will help meet, in the jargon of the library science world, their “information needs.” You can read about some of the folks we’ve had in this month over at The Beehive (the MHS blog):

Local Researcher Uses MHS to Populate Wikipedia Pages | 2011-01-28

Our Youngest Researcher | 2011-01-14

Alexander Kluger Presents at Brown Bag Lunch | 2011-01-13

Welcome Short-term Fellow Mary Kelley | 2011-01-12

In addition to my regular duties, I am now the coordinator of the image permissions requests that (surprisingly often!) come in from researchers who are seeking to reproduce photographs, artifacts, documents, maps, etc., in their soon-to-be-published books, articles, online websites, and exhibitions. Soon, I’ll be taking on the the citation permissions as well (when folks write simply to quote an unpublished document rather than visually reproduce it).

For the month February, we’re looking forward to welcoming two new staff members onto the library team, part-time library assistants who will be taking on the responsibilities I held as a part-timer myself. We’re looking forward to being fully-staffed again after six weeks of being down two staff members. More to come as the adventure continues!

a year of feminist classics, month two: the subjection of women

01 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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blogging, feminism

unknown woman reading
from the National Media Museum

The Year of Feminist Classics challenge was off to a good start last month with Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792). Check out the project blog for good conversation, contextual information, and links to participants’ own blog posts on the text and the experience of reading.
This month, the group is moving on to read another classic English-language text, this the 19th century essay on “The Subjection of Woman” (1869) published by philosopher John Stuart Mill and likely written in cooperation with his wife, Harriet Taylor Mill. As with Vindication, this work is out of copyright and can be found in multiple formats online.

Internet Archive (various formats to read online and download)

Project Gutenberg (various formats to read online and download)

LibriVox (MP3 audio download)

Please join in with the conversation if you are interested and have time to read even an excerpt of the work. And looking ahead to March, the readers will be moving into new territory with Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House.

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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