The fascinating true story of the characters in Hulu's "Mrs.
America" and a broader portrait of the two women's movements that
spurred an enduring rift between liberals and
conservatives.
Marjorie J. Spruill is Distinguished Professor Emerita of History from the University of South Carolina. She is the author of New Women of the New South and the editor of numerous anthologies including One Woman, One Vote. Spruill’s research for Divided We Stand was supported by fellowships from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. She lives in South Carolina.
Convincingly traces today’s schisms to events surrounding the
National Women's Conference, a four-day gathering in Houston in
November 1977. These divergent narratives from 40 years ago offer
many lessons to those hoping to maintain the momentum of the Jan.
21 women's marches.
*New York Times Book Review*
Marjorie Spruill describes a polarized America that will be
recognizable to any consumer of today’s news…A story crucial to
understanding American politics over the past 40 years…The question
raised by the battle of 1977--who speaks for women?--still bedevils
American politics.
*Wall Street Journal*
This timely history anatomizes two bitterly opposed women’s
movements, tracing a connection between 1977 and 2016.
*The New Yorker*
While the shortcomings of the women’s movement in protecting their
advances is well-documented in this book, it is the rise of
conservative women and how they redirected the Republican Party’s
positions that makes the book so interesting. Feminists and
supporters of women’s rights will find this difficult to swallow,
but this is an important book for them to read.
*New York Journal of Books*
Fascinating…DIVIDED WE STAND evokes two movements, two equal
mobilizations, struggling over the role of women in America.
*The Nation*
The NWC [National Women's Conference] featured people and political
trends whose significance is all the greater given the election’s
outcome. The book details how the conference provoked a bitter
debate between feminists and conservative women
activists…[Spruill’s] interviews of key participants both
illuminate the narrative and preserve first-hand accounts for
future scholars.
*Washington Independent Review of Books*
Spruill strives to be evenhanded, pointing out the mistakes and
excesses of both sides…DIVIDED WE STAND lucidly explains just how
we got so divided.
*Dallas Morning News*
Spruill’s project of historical reclamation is an important one …
The value of reconstructing those days [of the 1977 National
Women’s Conference] and pondering their meaning for the light they
might shed on ours is unquestionable.
*New York Review of Books*
Noted historian Marjorie J. Spruill has written a well-researched,
detailed history of the modern-day fight over women's rights and
its 'essential role' in bringing the United States to the fractious
state we currently endure . . . Divided We Stand is essential for
understanding the recent past as well as the present.
*Southwestern Historical Quarterly*
An outstanding study of the National Women's Conference (NWC).
Published to coincide with the conference's fortieth anniversary,
Divided We Stand is the first book to fully explore this momentous
event . . . [Spruill] places readers in strategy sessions and
frontline skirmishes, allowing them to feel what it was like to be
a part of the buildup to and the aftermath of the NWC.
*Journal of Southern History*
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