By: Dr. Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Description: In every age and in every culture there have been women who challenged the prevailing
gender prescriptions and struck a nerve, resulting in waves of either change or repression.
In Women and Gender in the New South, Elizabeth Hayes Turner draws on a multiplicity
of sources--part of the great outpouring of works in the field of women's history
that has emerged in the past 40 years--to bring together in one volume the history
of conservative, moderate, and even radical women's groups. The book demonstrates
how women and men from different racial and economic backgrounds not only weathered
but also shaped the political and cultural landscape of the New South. Employing women's
history, gender analysis, and race and class studies, Women and Gender in the New
South shapes this accumulated scholarship into an interpretative overlay that takes
southern women and men from the ravages of one war to the opportunities of another.
"Turner's work is a smart, engagingly-written, and valuable analysis of how white and black women fared during this critical period. . . . The field of southern women's history is extraordinarily vibrant, and Turner captures the best of it, synthesizes in into a short narrative, and makes it all look easy."
--Stephanie Cole, University of Texas at Arlington
Available from Amazon.com