In 1788, following the death of charismatic founder Mother Ann Lee, the celibate religious group known as the Shakers set out to institutionalize equality of the sexes in their theology, government, and daily practice. In this book, Glendyne Wergland evaluates how well they succeeded in that mission by examining the experiences of women within Shaker communities over more than a century. Drawing on an extensive archive of primary documents, Wergland discusses topics ranging from girl-hood, health, and dress to why women joined the Shakers and how they were viewed by those outside their community. She analyzes the division of labour between men and women, showing that there was considerable cooperation and reciprocity in carrying out most tasks - from food production to laundering to gathering firewood - even as gendered conflicts remained. In her conclusion, Wergland draws together all of these threads to show that Shaker communities achieved a remarkable degree of gender equality at a time when women elsewhere still suffered under the legal and social strictures of the traditional patriarchal order.
In so doing, she argues, the experience of Shaker women served as a model for promoting women's rights in American political culture.
- ISBN10 1558498621
- ISBN13 9781558498624
- Publish Date 23 February 2011
- Publish Status Unknown
- Out of Print 13 June 2014
- Publish Country US
- Imprint University of Massachusetts Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 248
- Language English