女权主义友谊与格林威治村的异端俱乐部

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1017/s1537781422000494
C. Visser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当异端俱乐部于1912年开始开会时,“女权主义”一词相对较新。正如俱乐部创始人玛丽·詹尼·豪(Marie Jenney Howe)所认为的,这个词表明了一种“改变的心理”,源于“女性新意识的创造”。文学评论家和文化历史学家乔安娜·斯库茨在她的俱乐部新历史《热床:波西米亚格林威治村和激发现代女权主义的秘密俱乐部》中写道,当异教女性走到一起时,她们什么都不想做——她们只想谈论“世界及其在其中的地位”(1)。异教徒俱乐部允许所有成员都是女性,参与自由和坦率的思想讨论。会议每两周举行一次,但在大多数成员离开城市的夏季除外。他们首先在公共场合见面,在波利餐厅或自由俱乐部的会议室见面,然后在20世纪20年代的大部分时间里私下见面,在会员公寓里见面。在集体午宴之后,成员们就上次会议商定的议题进行了数小时的非正式讨论。主题从对宇宙抽象奥秘的哲学思考到妇女选举权、节育、工人权利和经济独立的直接现实政治。无论如何,讨论总是涉及妇女。到20世纪20年代,异端俱乐部的会员名单被解读为进步时代女性历史上名副其实的“名人录”,自称是“最不守规矩和
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Feminist Friendships and Greenwich Village’s Heterodoxy Club
When the Heterodoxy Club began meeting in 1912, the term “feminism” was relatively new. The word, as the club’s founder Marie Jenney Howe believed, identified a “changed psychology” stemming from the “creation of a new consciousness in women.”1 A shared belief in this new attitude ofmind called feminism brought together some of the era’smost recognizable women in the heart of Greenwich Village. In her new history of the club, Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that SparkedModern Feminism, literary critic and cultural historian Joanna Scutts writes that when the women of Heterodoxy came together, they were not trying to do anything—they just wanted to talk about “the world and their place in it” (1). The Heterodoxy Club allowed members, all of whom were women, to engage in the free and frank discussion of ideas. Meetings took place on a biweekly basis, except during the summer months when most members left the city. They met first in public, in restaurants such as Polly’s or the meeting spaces of the Liberal Club, and then in private, meeting in members’ apartments for much of the 1920s. Following a group luncheon, members engaged in hours of informal discussion on a topic agreed upon at the last meeting. Topics ranged from philosophical considerations of the abstract mysteries of the universe to the immediate practical politics of women’s suffrage, birth control, workers’ rights, and economic independence. Regardless, the discussions always concerned women. By the 1920s, the Heterodoxy Club’s membership roll read as a veritable “who’s who” of Progressive Era women’s history, a self-described gathering of “the most unruly and
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