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Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the…
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Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism (editie 2022)

door Joanna Scutts (Auteur)

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"On a Saturday afternoon in New York in late 1912, around the plain wooden tables of Polly's Restaurant in Greenwich Village, a group of women gathered, all of them convinced that they were going to change the world. It was the first meeting of "Heterodoxy," a secret supper club. The goals of the group were simple: They would meet to talk about their lives, their politics, and the still-not widely recognized idea that women were fundamentally equal to men. In a move of liberation, they kept no records of their meetings, leaving them free to discuss a new term borrowed from the French: feminism. Together, the women of Heterodoxy fostered not only a community, but a movement. The club became a defining agent within the Greenwich Village radical scene in the 1910s. Its members were passionate advocates of free love, equal marriage, and easier divorce; several lived openly in same-sex relationships. The friendships of Heterodoxy made their unconventional lives possible, through its reassurance that other women felt differently about the world and wanted more from it than they had been raised to expect. Wealthy hostess Mabel Dodge invited artists to mingle with socialites and socialists at her apartment near Washington Square Park. Feminist rabble-rouser Henrietta Rodman turned the Liberal Club's headquarters into a home for plays, parties, and politics. Playwright Susan Glaspell launched the groundbreaking theater collective the Provincetown Players out of the summer home of her Heterodoxy friend Mary Heaton Vorse. For these women, everything from the way they dressed to the causes they championed was self-consciously new, and the daily pursuit of a future they were trying to imagine into being was exhausting. They needed each other; as inspiration and support, as friends and lovers. Perfect for readers of The Barbizon and At The Existentialist Café, Hotbed is the never-before-told story of the bold women whose radical ideas, unruly lives, and extraordinary friendships blazed the trail for female ambition"--… (meer)
Lid:Aubslynn22
Titel:Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism
Auteurs:Joanna Scutts (Auteur)
Info:Seal Press (2022), 400 pages
Verzamelingen:Jouw bibliotheek, Verlanglijst, Aan het lezen, Te lezen, Favorieten
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Trefwoorden:to-read

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Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism door Joanna Scutts

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Toon 2 van 2
A really interesting overview of women's (and others') social movements in the 1910s and '20s. Lots of information about the issues in play at the time woven together skillfully—labor rights, civil rights, access to birth control, pacifism—all under the umbrella of women's suffrage, and the Greenwich Village Heterodoxy club, which brought a range of (mostly white, well off) women together to debate and advocate. Scutts makes a point of acknowledging the conflicts and areas where class and race constrained their activism to their particular lanes—particularly, but not limited, to—the gaps between white and Black women's suffrage. There's a lot to be learned here even if you know your history of the period, and plenty that has resonance in today's political climate. Not a quick read, but very rewarding, and I enjoyed getting some background on the women I've only known as names in my reading. ( )
  lisapeet | Aug 21, 2022 |
Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism, by Joanna Scutts, is a snapshot of a very specific time and place that speaks to much of what has come along since and what we are still struggling for and against.

While some of the names will be familiar this is about the power of community. I would argue that in particular it is about community that is open to change and greater inclusion as opportunity presents itself. Just like individual people are far from perfect, so are groups of people, so one can certainly find things that, in an ideal world, would have been different. But these women also realized their humanity and when they saw opportunities to include more people and more ideas, they did, and that is the sign of compassionate intelligence.

A book I recently read (The Quiet Before by Gal Beckerman) emphasizes the importance of some form of community that allows ideas to form and be modified through debate and discussion (and yes, sometimes argument) prior to a movement being able to make an impact. Otherwise, what we often get is a flashpoint then a return to something close to what was before. This group would fit nicely in that work, Heterodoxy served as that incubator for the ideas that could serve as the foundation for a movement.

Although suffrage was a major cause at the time these women did not limit their thoughts or actions to just one cause. They were concerned with women's lives as a whole, of which suffrage was a part. They also illustrate for today's movements the power of both formulating ideas within a community as well as of working in groups to accomplish goals.

Whether your interest is strictly in history or in feminist history in particular this book will be a rewarding read. It is well written, engaging, and offers a splendid works cited section as well as excellent notes for those wanting to learn more. Also, please read the acknowledgements page, both as a courtesy and to learn about how you can view a digitized copy of the "Heterodoxy to Marie" album, it is a fascinating thing to view.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. ( )
  pomo58 | Feb 15, 2022 |
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"On a Saturday afternoon in New York in late 1912, around the plain wooden tables of Polly's Restaurant in Greenwich Village, a group of women gathered, all of them convinced that they were going to change the world. It was the first meeting of "Heterodoxy," a secret supper club. The goals of the group were simple: They would meet to talk about their lives, their politics, and the still-not widely recognized idea that women were fundamentally equal to men. In a move of liberation, they kept no records of their meetings, leaving them free to discuss a new term borrowed from the French: feminism. Together, the women of Heterodoxy fostered not only a community, but a movement. The club became a defining agent within the Greenwich Village radical scene in the 1910s. Its members were passionate advocates of free love, equal marriage, and easier divorce; several lived openly in same-sex relationships. The friendships of Heterodoxy made their unconventional lives possible, through its reassurance that other women felt differently about the world and wanted more from it than they had been raised to expect. Wealthy hostess Mabel Dodge invited artists to mingle with socialites and socialists at her apartment near Washington Square Park. Feminist rabble-rouser Henrietta Rodman turned the Liberal Club's headquarters into a home for plays, parties, and politics. Playwright Susan Glaspell launched the groundbreaking theater collective the Provincetown Players out of the summer home of her Heterodoxy friend Mary Heaton Vorse. For these women, everything from the way they dressed to the causes they championed was self-consciously new, and the daily pursuit of a future they were trying to imagine into being was exhausting. They needed each other; as inspiration and support, as friends and lovers. Perfect for readers of The Barbizon and At The Existentialist Café, Hotbed is the never-before-told story of the bold women whose radical ideas, unruly lives, and extraordinary friendships blazed the trail for female ambition"--

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