Normal women 900 years of making history

Philippa Gregory

Book - 2024

"A history of England from the Norman Conquest through the twentieth century, told through the stories of ordinary women"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Philippa Gregory (author)
Edition
First HarperOne hardcover [edition]
Physical Description
678 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), portraits (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 581-632, 641-649) and index.
ISBN
9780063304321
9780063304338
9780008601713
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. 1066-1348 Doomsday
  • Doomsday
  • Country
  • Abbeys and Convents
  • Towns
  • London
  • Women's Status
  • Women's Work
  • Women at War
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Violence Against Women
  • Marriage
  • Women's Love and Sexual Desire
  • The Nature of Women
  • Part 2. 1348-1455 Women Rising
  • The Great Pestilence
  • The Peasants' Revolt
  • Women Rising
  • Pushback
  • Marriage
  • Single Women
  • Prostitution
  • Women Loving Women
  • The Nature of Women
  • Courtly Rape
  • Part 3. 1455-1485 Women at War
  • Women at War
  • Women's Work
  • Marriage
  • Prostitution
  • Part 4. 1485-1660 Becoming a Weaker Vessel
  • Religious Change
  • Religious Protest
  • Women Who Died for Their Faiths
  • Religious Exiles
  • Preachers
  • 'Weaker Vessel'
  • Manly Qualities
  • An Unkingly King
  • She-soldiers
  • Hard Times for Poor Women
  • Violence Against Women
  • Prostitution
  • Women Enslaved
  • Upper-class Women's Work
  • Middling-class Women's Work
  • Labouring Women
  • Education
  • Medicine
  • Witchcraft
  • Faiths
  • Women at Play
  • The Invention of 'Women's Work'
  • Protest
  • Petitions
  • Marriage
  • Widows
  • Single Women
  • Women Loving Women
  • Part 5. 1660-1764 Locked Out and Locked In
  • Land Grab
  • Protest
  • Power Grab
  • Political Protest
  • Work
  • Education
  • Exclusion
  • Prostitution
  • Slaves and Slave Owners
  • Literary Work
  • Sport
  • Romanticism
  • Love and Marriage in Novels and Life
  • Women's Love for Women
  • Female Husbands
  • Cross-dressing Women
  • Single Women
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Witchcraft
  • Violence
  • Health
  • Part 6. 1765-1857 Making a Lady
  • Slavery
  • Servitude
  • Slaves Protest Against Slavery
  • Elite White Women Protest Against Slavery
  • Working-class White Women Protest Against Slavery
  • 'Breadwinner Wage'
  • Women's Work
  • Education
  • Health
  • Separate Spheres
  • Sex
  • Women Divided
  • Elite Women Protests
  • Working Women Protests
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Rape
  • Sport
  • Defining Girls and Training Ladies
  • Young Victoria
  • Marriage
  • Single Women
  • Sapphism
  • Women Representing Themselves as Men
  • Female Husbands
  • Part 7. 1857-1928 Separate Spheres
  • Protest
  • Women Against the Vote
  • Women for the Vote
  • Working-class Protest
  • The Nature of Women
  • Single Women
  • Women Loving Women
  • Female Husbands
  • Marriage
  • Victoria, Wife and Empress
  • Sport
  • Work
  • Part 8. 1928-1945 Into the World
  • Women Get the Vote
  • Work
  • Health
  • Women Loving Women
  • Women at War
  • Women Loving Women at War
  • Women Dressing as Men … and Becoming Men
  • Protest
  • Demobilisation
  • The Last Witch
  • Part 9. 1945-1994 A Woman Today
  • Women Endangered
  • Rape
  • Work
  • Women in Authority
  • Protest
  • Women Divided
  • Immigration
  • Health
  • Sport
  • Wealth
  • Women Loving Women
  • HeteroSex
  • The Nature of Twentieth-century Women
  • Spiritual Equality
  • Afterword
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Illustrations
  • Select Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The bestselling, prolific historical novelist presents "a huge book about women." Gregory brings her extensive knowledge of women in society over the centuries to a vast sociological study of the lives of "regular" women throughout the past 900 years. A tour de force of research, the book chronicles the role of women in British society by era, starting with William the Conqueror's Domesday Book, commissioned in 1086, up until 1994. In each period, the author presents sections on women's health, marriage, work, crime, punishment, immigration, rape, and "women loving women." The overall sense reading this dense social history is that "normal" women, in spite of men's belittling characterizations, made indelible contributions to the British Empire while rarely reaping the benefits. The author keenly delineates the different lives of women by class, such as the arduous life of working women versus aristocratic women, who, though rich in material possessions, were still affected by inadequate diet, constrictive clothing, poor ventilation, and mental strain from severe societal oppression. A familiar, depressing refrain over the centuries is the meager material compensation for women's work and their deliberate exclusion from "profitable work, from education, from training, from the guilds and trades, and from the professions and from authority." Particularly enlightening is Gregory's exploration of Victorian society, from mining strikes, to campaigns for women's suffrage, to the outrageous hypocrisy of Queen Victoria serving as both a steely emperor and docile wife opposed to women's rights. Gregory also examines "Sapphism," "Female Husbands," and other similar topics suggesting that sexual transitioning was more frequent to women seeking greater roles and autonomy in society than previously regarded by historians. The author concludes in 1994, when the Church of England finally ordained women as priests. A highly instructive, exhaustive study that reveals the realities behind "ideal" or "inferior" designations of women. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.