Michael D. Pierson is professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, and author of Lt. Spalding in Civil War Louisiana: A Union Officer's Humor, Privilege, and Ambition.
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Description
"The Wild Woman of Cincinnati is a fascinating little book that will find its way into numerous classrooms due to its highly accessible use of microhistory to understand many significant cultural and political trends in the nineteenth-century United States. . . . Thinking about con men and spectacles in the Queen City through the lens of reception, racism, and entertainment, Pierson provides an engaging history with numerous tentacular connections to major narratives concerning the North and the South in the late antebellum era."--Journal of Southern History "Pierson, a historian of American political culture, presents an in-depth study of how the 'Wild Woman' episode in Cincinnati, Ohio, reflected antebellum politics and culture. . . . The text is supported by meaningful illustrations, a sizable bibliography with numerous primary sources, and useful endnotes. . . . Recommended."--CHOICE "A fascinating and elegantly written study, The Wild Woman of Cincinnati restores the complex and compelling 'Wild Woman' to the historic record, providing her the dignity, respect, and agency she was all too often denied during her own lifetime. Pierson's volume makes sophisticated arguments about what the Wild Woman's story reveals about regional and political divisions, and conceptions of gender and power, in the antebellum United States. An engaging, valuable contribution to the scholarship, which will be of tremendous interest to both scholars and the general public alike."--Holly M. Kent, author of Her Voice Will Be on the Side of Right: Gender and Power in Women's Antebellum Antislavery Fiction

