Vigorous reforms : women writers and the politics of health in the nineteenth-century United States / Jess Libow.
2025
RA778 .L78494 2025eb
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Unlimited
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DRM-Free
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Can lend chapters, not whole books
Details
Title
Vigorous reforms : women writers and the politics of health in the nineteenth-century United States / Jess Libow.
Author
ISBN
9781469689067 (electronic bk.)
1469689065 (electronic bk.)
9781469689029
1469689022
9781469689036
1469689030
1469689065 (electronic bk.)
9781469689029
1469689022
9781469689036
1469689030
Published
Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, 2025.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xiii, 196 pages) : illustrations.
Call Number
RA778 .L78494 2025eb
Alternate Call Number
LIT004290
HIS036040
HIS036040
Dewey Decimal Classification
613.7/045
Summary
"Nineteenth-century America saw profound changes in the ways people viewed their bodies, their health, and their corporeal connection to their environments. Though much of the writing about bodies was produced by men, Vigorous Reforms focuses on the understudied literary history of how women came to understand physicality and its connection to their everyday lives. The introduction of physical education allowed women to conceive their own and others' bodies not as static entities, but as adaptable to their own needs, goals, and labor. Jess Libow also shows the limits of the science of the era-since bodily differences were often understood as biologically determined, theories of health defined womanhood in terms of racialized bodily abilities. For example, settler colonial ideology coded Native women as deteriorating due to their 'uncivilized'" ways of life, and proponents of slavery insisted that Black women's inherent strength made them suitable for enslavement. Drawing on a wide-ranging archive of ideas about exercise, hygiene, and nutrition, Libow argues that women's writing about health was fundamental to the development of what we now think of as American feminism"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Print version record.
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Table of Contents
The future of White womanhood in young America
Household health in the domestic's novel
Harriet Jacobs and the abolitionist "Science of good management"
Pedagogies of disability at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School
"Education for citizenship" and the immigrant body
From physical education to wellness.
Household health in the domestic's novel
Harriet Jacobs and the abolitionist "Science of good management"
Pedagogies of disability at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School
"Education for citizenship" and the immigrant body
From physical education to wellness.