A Year in Books/Day 11: Born for Liberty

  • Title: Born for Liberty A History of Women in America
  • Author: Sara M. Evans
  • Year Published: 1989 (The Free Press)
  • Year Purchased: 2001/2002
  • Source: Unknown
  • About: An intelligent, critical study of the changing nature of women’s place in American society.
  • Motivation: I’m a feminist who enjoys a good, solid read on the subject.
    Suffragists picketing the White House, January...

    Image via Wikipedia

     

  • Times Read: 2
  • Random Excerpt/Page 85: “By the 1830s the social worlds occupied by the genteel and by the working classes were distinct and rarely overlapped. A lack of familiarity with one another’s cultural patterns-and with the circumstances that explained them-quickly evolved into suspicion or contempt. Middle-class reformers often viewed the lower classes as a breed apart, and readily condemned their ideas of domestic comfort and standards of morals far below their own.”
  • Happiness Scale: 9

2 thoughts on “A Year in Books/Day 11: Born for Liberty

    • Thanks so much! I own a lot of books (really, a lot) and it occurred to me how many different factors are at play each time I buy one; I don’t think that I’ve ever bought a book for less than two reasons, usually more. That started me thinking about how you could almost trace my life through my books-where, why, how I came to own them.

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