Emmeline B. Wells

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSISBN: 9781607815235

An Intimate History

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By Carol Cornwall Madsen
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
254 x 178 mm
Weight:
1260 g
Pages:
570

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Description

Stories of the ordinary people who helped build Salt Lake City emerge from a study of their often humble adobe houses. Rather than focusing on men and women in positions of power and influence, the emphasis here is on the lives of people who built their sturdy, simple homes from mud. A Modest Homestead provides architectural descriptions of ninety-four extant adobe houses. They are as basic as the people who built them-small tradesmen and farmers, laborers and domestics. Author Laurie Bryant discusses the neighbourhoods in Salt Lake City where adobe houses have survived, often much renovated and disguised, and she showcases the houses not just as they appear today but as they were originally built. Almost all the houses now have additions and improvements, and without some dissection they are not always recognisable, often being both more comfortable and pleasant than might have been the case in the nineteenth century. What emerges through Bryant's research is an enlarged picture of the roughhewn life of many early Utahns. Includes 120 historic and contemporary photographs.

Carol Cornwall Madsenis professor emeritus of history at Brigham Young University, a past president of the Mormon History Association, and former vice-chair of the Board of Utah State History. She is an award-winning author and her books include In Their Own Words: Women and the Story of Nauvoo and A Woman's Advocate, The Public Life of Emmeline B. Wells, 1870-1920, which won three best book awards.

"Madsen's absorbing biography is meticulously researched and elegantly composed. No Mormon studies education is complete without this book." -Kate Holbrook, specialist in Women's History, LDS Church History Department, and coeditor of Women and Mormonism: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives "Carol Madsen, having previously dealt with Emmeline Wells' public life, now ably explores her interior landscape, tracing the contrast between her public triumph and her private pain, from her 'wild and fanciful' youth to her unexpected humiliations. Wells' excellent record-keeping habit enables the rich detail of her story. This extended and sympathetic inner biography of the best known Mormon woman of her time is told largely in her own words, linked by Madsen's steady and judicious narrative." -Claudia L. Bushman, author of Contemporary Mormonism "A significant contribution to women's history, Utah history, and LDS history that will also appeal to the general reader." -Kathryn L. McKay, professor of history, Weber State University "Emmeline B. Wells is an admirable and engaging work of historical research and imagination. It offers a compelling portrait of an ambitious, loving, often unhappy but always striving human being, and as it does so it offers readers also a refreshing new perspective on domestic and political possibilities in the nineteenth century." -Mormon Studies Review "A thorough and engaging biography of Emmeline Wells's private life. Massive amounts of careful research create a three-dimensional picture of Mormon society from Nauvoo to Salt Lake City as Emmeline moved through it, as well as the late 19th- and early 20th-century American suffrage and national political circles she became part of. The biography is as readable as a good novel and even more engaging because the story it tells is of a real woman whose extraordinary achievements were made despite personal tragedies that would have defeated someone less hopeful and resilient." -Susan Elizabeth Howe, poet and retired professor of English, Brigham Young University "Despite the daunting physical presence of the book, its prose and short chapter structure makes it accessible for a broad audience. . . . The intimate biography is important because it recognizes the multiple ways we can know this woman who is famous for her remarkable public achievements. Readers not only see someone who writes, leads, and organizes. We see someone who feels." -Juvenile Instructor "Few historians have written as well or as much on Mormon history as author Carol Madsen, and in this work she does not disappoint in the least. Required reading for anyone associated with Mormon studies as well as researchers studying 19th century American religion more generally or women's history, and certainly recommended for anyone who enjoys a good biography." -Association for Mormon Letters "This attractively designed book is a moving and well-told introduction to an unforgettable woman." -Western Historical Quarterly "Every chapter, every page invites the reader into the thinking and the social world of Emmeline and her contemporaries. ... This era of female writers and defenders of the faith, of innovators and preservers of tradition, and of socially alert women in times of transition will undoubtedly be better understood and valued because of Carol Madsen's notable achievement."-BYU Studies Quarterly

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