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This group biography follows three generations of ministers'
daughters and wives in a famed American Unitarian family. Shifting
the focus from pulpit to parsonage, and from sermon to whispered
secrets, Cynthia Tucker humanizes the Eliots and their religious
tradition and lifts up a largely neglected female vocation.
Spanning 150 years from the early 19th century forward, the
narrative shapes itself into a series of stories. Each of six
chapters takes up a different woman's defining experience, from the
deaths of numerous children and the anguish of infertility to the
suffocation of small parish life with its chronic loneliness,
doubt, and resentment. One woman confides in a rare close friend,
another in the anonymous readers of magazines that publish her
poems. A third escapes from an ill-fitting role by succumbing to
neurasthenia, leaving one debilitating condition for another. The
matriarch's granddaughters script larger lives, bypassing marriage
and churchly employment to follow their hearts into same-sex
relationships, and major careers in public health and preschool
education. In two concluding chapters, Tucker enlarges the frame to
bring in the regular parish women who collectively give voice to
issues the ministers' kin must keep to themselves. All of the
stories are linked by the women's continuing battles to make
themselves heard over clerical wisdom that contradicts their
reality.
Pulitzer Prize-winner Cynthia Tucker and award-winning author Frye
Gaillard reflect in a powerful series of essays on the role of the
South in America’s long descent into Trumpism. In 1974 the great
Southern author John Egerton published his seminal work, The
Americanization of Dixie: The Southernization of America,
reflecting on the double-edged reality of the South becoming more
like the rest of the country and vice versa. Tucker and Gaillard
dive even deeper into that reality from the time that Egerton
published his book until the present. They see the dark side—the
morphing of the Southern strategy of Richard Nixon and Ronald
Reagan into the Republican Party of today with its thinly disguised
(if indeed it is disguised all all) embrace of white supremacy and
the subversion of democratic ideals. They explore the "birtherism"
of Donald Trump and the roots of the racial backlash against
President Obama; the specter of family separation on our southern
border, with its echoes of similar separations in the era of
slavery; as well as the rise of the Christian right, the
demonstrations in Charlottesville, the death of George Floyd, and
the attack on our nation’s capital—all of which, they argue,
have roots that trace their way to the South. But Tucker and
Gaillard see another side too, a legacy rooted in the civil rights
years that has given us political leaders like John Lewis, Jimmy
Carter, Raphael Warnock, and Stacy Abrams. The authors raise the
ironic possibility that the South, regarded by some as the heart of
the country’s systemic racism, might lead the way on the path to
redemption. Tucker and Gaillard, colleagues and frequent
collaborators at the University of South Alabama in Mobile, bring a
multi-racial perspective and years of political reporting to bear
on a critical moment in American history, a time of racial
reckoning and of democracy under siege.
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