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The Day - How women invented book clubs, revolutionizing reading and their own lives - News from southeastern Connecticut


Published April 12. 2021 6:41AM 
Jess McHugh, The Washington Post
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The women met wherever they could get their hands on a few books and some quiet: in empty classrooms, back rooms of bookstores, at friend's homes, even while working in mills.
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the first American reading circles — a precursor to book clubs — required little more than a thirst for literature and a desire to discuss it with like-minded women.
Journalist Margaret Fuller held one session of what she called her "conversations" in 1839, likely in her sister's rented room on Chauncey Place, a few blocks from Boston Common.

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Considering History: Women Whose Critical Patriotism Made America Better


In an Early Republic period defined by expansion and concurrent policies such as Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal Act, national narratives seemed to have no place for Native Americans. But the novelist and activist Sedgwick offered a different vision of that foundational American community, creating in her historical novel
Hope Leslie a case for what she called (in the book’s preface) “their high-souled courage and patriotism.” And her character Magawisca, a young Pequot woman who narrates to an English audience her own account of the 1637 massacre at Mystic, offers a “new version of an old story,” what Sedgwick calls “putting the chisel in the hands of truth, and giving it to whom it belonged.”

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