"A brilliant . . . analysis of the fragile hegemony and
identities of colonial Virginia's elite men. . . . "On the Sources
of Patriarchal Rage" compellingly illuminates the ragged edge where
masculinity and colonial identity meet. . . . the book] will
undoubtedly send Jefferson scholars scurrying back to their notes.
. . . Most significant, by being among the first to tackle the
subject of masculinity in early America, Lockridge forces colonial
scholars to reexamine the lives of men they thought they already
knew too well."
--"William and Mary Quarterly"
Two of the greatest of Virginia gentlemen, William Byrd II and
Thomas Jefferson, each kept a commonplace book--in effect, a
journal where men were to collect wisdom in the form of anecdotes
and quotations from their readings with a sense of detachment and
scholarship. Writing in these books, each assembled a prolonged
series of observations laden with fear and hatred of women.
Combining ignorance with myth and misogyny, Byrd's and Jefferson's
books reveal their deep ambivalence about women, telling of women's
lascivious nature and The Female Creed and invoking the fallible,
repulsive, and implicitly corruptible female body as a central
metaphor for all tales of social and political corruption.
Were these private outbursts meaningless and isolated incidents,
attributable primarily to individual pathology, or are they written
revelations of the forces working on these men to maintain
patriarchal control? Their hatred for women draws upon a kind of
misogynistic reserve found in the continental and English
intellectual traditions, but it also twists and recontextualizes
less misogynistic excerpts to intensified effect. From this
interplay of intellectual traditions and the circumstances of each
man's life and later behavior arises the possibility one or more
specific politics of misogyny is at work here.
Kenneth Lockridge's work, replete with excerpts from the books
themselves, leads us through these texts, exploring the structures,
contexts, and significance of these writings in the wider
historical context of gender and power. His book convincingly
illustrates the ferocity of early American patriarchal rage; its
various meanings, however suggestively explored here, must remain
contestable.
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