I. Rise of “true womanhood”
- Shift from locating “virtue” in the civic realm to the private sphere
- Reaction to the volatile economy; partisan politice
- Emergence of “separate spheres”
- Ideology v. reality
- Conception of white, affluent women as pure, pious, domestic and subordinate
- “Passionlessness”
- White, MC women increasingly perceived as more virtuous than men
- White, MC women increasingly perceived as more virtuous than men
II. Assessing the ideal of the passionless, true woman
- Repressing women by putting them on a pedestal?
- Why did some women promote these ideas?
- Reversed the older tradition of mistrust of women
- Allowed women to claim moral superiority
- Cornerstone of female reform movements
- Created collective consciousness among women
- Promoted female friendships and intimacy
- Passionate relationships between women not stigmatized
- Assisted women in their attempts to practice family limitation
III. History of abortion
- No statutory laws regarding abortion prior to the 19th century
- Common law
- Abortion a crime only after “quickening”
- Even after quickening, the destruction of a fetus was viewed as qualitatively different from, and punished less harshly, than murder
- A “heinous misdemeanor”
- Even after quickening, the destruction of a fetus was viewed as qualitatively different from, and punished less harshly, than murder
- Abortion a crime only after “quickening”
- Prior to 1830s, abortion was relatively rare
- Estimate: 1 out of every 25-30 births
- Not seen as a method of family limitation
- Unmarried women (“victims of passion”)
- First state laws (1821-41) punished only the person who performed the abortion
- Aimed at regulating the activities of apothecaries, midwives, “irregulars”
- From 1840-1870s, incidence of abortion rose sharply
- Estimate for 1850s-60s: 1 out of every 5 or 6 births
- Included married, “respectable” women
- Played into nativism and racism
- Became much more publicly visible
- Commercialization
- 1860-80: Highpoint of anti-abortion crusade
- Led by American Medical Association, not religious leaders
- Promoted the idea of pregnancy as a continuous process
- Attempted to convince public that abortion before quickening was tantamount to murder
- Led by American Medical Association, not religious leaders
- During this time, almost every state criminalized abortion performed at any point during the pregnancy
- Women and abortionists now both culpable
- Advertising abortifacients also criminalized
- Nevertheless, many women continued to procure illegal abortions with relative ease until the 1940-1950s
IV. Woman’s rights advocates on abortion
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and others viewed abortion (and even contraception) with trepidation
- Did not believe that severing the connection between sexuality and reproduction would be liberate women
- Feared male licentiousness; degradation of motherhood
- Yet criminalizing abortion was not part of their political agenda
- Argued that the guilt lay with men who impregnated women
- Supported the idea of “voluntary motherhood”
- Giving women the right to regulate sexual relations
- Giving women the right to regulate sexual relations
- Did not believe that severing the connection between sexuality and reproduction would be liberate women
V. Family as the “cradle of the middle class”
- How were Americans defining class?
- Not just about wealth
- Work; consumption; manners & emotional styles; family structure
- Self-control
- Work increasingly detached from home
- Rise of non-manual labor (clerks)
- Smaller families
- Intensive investment in childrearing
- Young men supported by their families well into their 20s
- Young men supported by their families well into their 20s
- Intensive investment in childrearing
VI. Victorian Motherhood
- The importance of “Mother Love” increasingly emphasized (Jan Lewis)
- Emphasis on instilling internal conscience through the provision or withdrawal of love
- Generating guilt/shame or an ‘internal censor’
- Different from the older method of external restraint: (i.e. “spare the rod”)
- Intensive mothering (v. the extensive mothering of colonial women)
- Emergence of first advice manuals for mothers; maternal associations
- Victorians did not emphasis the cultivation of independence or autonomy
- “Silver cord”
- Mother love as a redemptive force
- Mother-son relationship sentimentalized, even romanticized
VII. Marriage
- Increasing emphasis placed on love and emotional fulfillment and happiness
- Stephanie Coontz: “By the middle of the nineteenth century there was near unanimity . . . . that the love-based marriage, in which the wife stayed home protected and supported by her husband, was a recipe for heaven on earth.”
- Evident in the mid-19th century attacks on Mormonism and polygamy
VIII. Sarah Josepha Hale
- Left a widow in 1822; became a writer to support herself.
- Left children in care of relatives, relocated to Boston to become editor of a magazine, Ladies Magazine and Literary Gazette
- Became editor of Godeys’ Ladies Book in 1837
- Campaigned for Thanksgiving to be a national holiday
- Lincoln declared one 1863
- Before then, a New England holiday, no set date
IX. Catherine Beecher, 1800-78
- Founder of home economics
- Became a teacher at 20
- Opposed to women voting
- Feared compromising women’s moral authority
- Sought “the elevation of my sex”
- Treatise on Domestic Economy, 1841
- Practical, not overly sentimental
- Never married or ran her own home