Changes

Jump to: navigation, search
no edit summary
History is fickle. During the 19th Century, Ernestine Rose was one of the most important and famous international advocates for feminism, free though and anti-slavery in the United States and Britain. She worked closely with renown figures in this movement such as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Despite her contributions to feminism, atheism, and anti-slavery, she has slowly been erased from history.
'''How would you describe yourself as a historian?'''
'''How would you describe yourself I was trained as a cultural historian?'''at Columbia in their Modern European History program, which included Britain. I have always used culture – poetry, novels, paintings - in both my teaching and writing.
I was trained as a cultural historian at Columbia in their Modern European History program, which included Britain. I have always used culture – poetry, novels, paintings - in both my teaching and writing..
The sexism I experienced in graduate school led me to join Columbia Women’s Liberation in 1969. After a few years of being in both a consciousness-raising group and the Coordinating Committee on Women in the Historical Profession (CCWHP), I realized that history itself excluded women. In the mid-‘70s I began working in women’s history and the rest of my professional life, both teaching and writing, has been in women’s history. My first book, A History of Their Own: Women in Europe from Prehistory to the Present, done with Judith P. Zinsser, was two volumes long and took ten years to write. (It first came out here in 1988 and then was published in Britain, Germany, Spain, and Italy. We did a revised edition in 2000.) I then moved into transatlantic women’s history. Both Joyous Greetings: The First International Women’s Movement, 1830-1860 (2000) and my current biography of Ernestine Rose, The Rabbi’s Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist Pioneer, deal with both the United States and Western Europe.

Navigation menu