Log In | Account Info

Cart | Checkout
 
 



View the SIU Press Catalog
 
Gender and Rhetorical Space in American Life, 1866-1910
1st Edition
Nan Johnson
$29.50
Paper
0-8093-2426-1
978-0-8093-2426-2
240 pages, 6 x 9, 21 Illus.
3/18/2002

About the Book

Nan Johnson demonstrates that after the Civil War, nonacademic or “parlor” traditions of rhetorical performance helped to sustain the icon of the white middle class woman as queen of her domestic sphere by promoting a code of rhetorical behavior for women that required the performance of conventional femininity. Through a lucid examination of the boundaries of that gendered rhetorical space—and the debate about who should occupy that space—Johnson explores the codes governing and challenging the American woman’s proper rhetorical sphere in the postbellum years.

 

While men were learning to preach, practice law, and set political policies, women were reading elocution manuals, letter-writing handbooks, and other conduct literature. These texts reinforced the conservative message that women’s words mattered, but mattered mostly in the home. Postbellum pedagogical materials were designed to educate Americans in rhetorical skills, but they also persistently directed the American woman to the domestic sphere as her proper rhetorical space. Even though these materials appeared to urge the white middle class women to become effective speakers and writers, convention dictated that a woman’s place was at the hearthside where her rhetorical talents were to be used in counseling and instructing as a mother and wife.

 

Aided by twenty-one illustrations, Johnson has meticulously compiled materials from historical texts no longer readily available to the general public and, in so doing, has illuminated this intersection of rhetoric and feminism in the nineteenth century. The rhetorical pedagogies designed for a postbellum popular audience represent the cultural sites where a rethinking of women’s roles becomes open controversy about how to value their words. Johnson argues this era of uneasiness about shifting gender roles and the icon of the “quiet woman” must be considered as evidence of the need for a more complete revaluing of women’s space in historical discourse. 


Authors/Editors

Nan Johnson is an associate professor of English at the Ohio State University and author of Nineteenth-Century Rhetoric in North America.

Also of Interest

Appropriate[Ing] Dress
Carol Mattingly

Feminism Beyond Modernism
Elizabeth Flynn

Feminist Legacy
Suzanne Bordelon

Liberating Voices
Karyn L. Hollis

Regendering Delivery
Lindal Buchanan