The dazzling story of the early feminists who blazed a trail for the movement’s most radical ideas
Joanna Scuttsis a literary critic, historian and the author ofThe Extra Woman. She has written for theNew York Times,Washington Post and New Yorker, and created theParis Reviewseries 'Feminize Your Canon'. Raised in London and educated at Cambridge and Sussex universities, she gained her PhD from Columbia University and lives in New York.
‘Joanna Scutts’ fascinating secret US club of early
twentieth-century feminists… An enthralling story of rebellion but
also of the power of female friendship… Rigorous social history is
enlivened by brio and belief throughout’ Hephzibah Anderson,
Observer
‘Sets out to recover these forgotten activists, women who were
engaged in some of the most important campaigns of the
twentieth century... A series of illuminating vignettes that remind
us how far feminism has come over the past century, but also how
much remains familiar and yet to be achieved’ Kathryn Hughes,
Sunday Times
'[A] lively and absorbing new social history… it was only after I
read Hotbed that I realized the type of feminist
friendship from which I am more directly descended was that of the
Heterodites' New York Review of Books
'Incredibly resonant in today’s times, and a profound
read' Fiona Davis, New York Times-bestselling author of The
Lions of Fifth Avenue
'Deeply researched and deftly rendered... a spirited, inspiring
history' Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse
'A transporting tour-de-force of storytelling' Janice P.
Nimura, author of The Doctors Blackwell
'Spirit and panache... one for anyone interested in the history of
feminism, friendship, or New York City' Ruth Franklin,
award-winning author of Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life
'A wonderful tribute to the "restless audacious [and] creative
spirit" that pushes a culture beyond convention and complacency and
toward something new... fascinating' Maggie Doherty,
award-winning author of The Equivalents: A Story of Art, Female
Friendship, and Liberation in the 1960s
‘This enlightening book covers the first ten or so years of the
club’s existence. It is also the story of the early feminist
movement in the US, and highlights the underacknowledged part that
these activist women played in psychology, education, theatre,
journalism, anti-lynching legislation and the
early-twentieth-century American labour movement’ Ann Kennedy
Smith, Times Literary Supplement
‘A deeply researched and kinetic historical telling of Heterodoxy’s
fruitful, if also fraught, period, from its inception until the
early 1920s. In vibrant prose that summons the idealism and daring
of the very existence of Heterodoxy as a center for sisterhood and
women-led political thought, Scutts brings to life the stories of
women who formed friendships among their ranks, the majority of
whom were upper-middle-class authors, journalists, sociologists and
artists’ Washington Post
'Joanna Scutts hones in on one particularly fascinating corner of
this world: the Heterodoxy Club, a coterie of women that included
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Alice Kimball, Alison Turnbull Hopkins,
and Susan Glaspell, among other influential figures. Hotbed brings
you to the heart of the social world that sustained and supported
them, and it is filled with fascinating details for anyone remotely
interested in this history’ LitHub
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