Eight hundred thousand-that’s roughly the number of condolence letters former first lady Jackie Kennedy amassed in the two months following her husband’s murder. By the two-year anniversary of his death, the quantity had swollen beyond 1.5 million. Incapable of responding to every communication personally, Jackie made certain each was nevertheless granted acknowledgement.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Sunday, December 1, 2013
You Must Never Be Fearful
Happy Rosa Parks Day, friends! On December 1, 1955, Rosa was detained in Montgomery, Alabama for refusing to give up a seat in her bus’s colored section for a white passenger. Though she wasn't the first black commuter to rebel against discrimination, her act of defiance signaled a decisive turning-point in the Civil Rights Movement. Rosa has subsequently earned the designations “First Lady of Civil Rights” and “Mother of the Freedom Movement.”
For more about Rosa Parks' bold defiance, check-out:
Friday, November 29, 2013
How Jackie Kennedy Taught Us to Grieve
After Jackie’s telephone call, White high-tailed it up north. Anticipating the exposé, his editors at LIFE kept the presses open; it cost $30,000/hour. As The New York Post remarked, to do this for a story that wasn't composed, based on an interview that hadn’t transpired was unheard of. Nevertheless, a heart-to-heart with the slain president’s spouse was the of news story a lifetime!
Chatting with Jackie, White characterized her bearing, “Composure . . . beautiful . . . dressed in trim black slacks . . . beige pullover sweater . . . eyes wider than pools . . . calm voice.” During the next 3.5 hours, she chronicled that horrific day just a week earlier, before disclosing her purpose. She was fearful of JFK’s legacy being minimized or tarnished by critics. Steadfast in her vision of how Americans should think of the country’s fallen leader, Jackie disclosed one of the couple’s favorite nighttime routines.
Before bed, JFK enjoyed playing albums, in particular the cast recording for 1960’s smash Broadway musical, Camelot. His favorite lyrics, crooned by Richard Burton, were, “Don't let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment that was known as Camelot.” On reflection, Jackie imagined those sentimental lines encapsulated her husband’s presidency. She affirmed, “There'll be great presidents again — and the Johnsons are wonderful, they've been wonderful to me — but there'll never be a Camelot again.”
By equating JFK with this contemporary version of the Arthurian myth, Jackie was conjuring the depiction of the 35th president that’s endured the last half century. This reinterpretation, inspired by T. H. White’s The Once and Future King, accentuated the futility of war, reimagining the fabled monarch as peace-seeking visionary. Accordingly, this is how Jackie envisioned Americans remembering their lost commander-in-chief, a crusader who’d forfeited his life in pursuit of global harmony.
Later, White divulged both he and publishing supervisors were reluctant to disseminate Jackie’s Camelot analogy, but she was unyielding. Additionally, he consented to letting his interviewee make adjustments to the essay. Around 2 a.m., with Jackie lingering nearby, White dictated his editorial over the kitchen telephone. With subscriptions around 30 mil., “For President Kennedy: An Epilogue,” was undoubtedly consumed by innumerable readers. Subsequently, as Jackie had desired, JFK’s presidency would be immortalized as unequalled Camelot.
Undeniably, Jackie’s comparison has faults. Though JFK professed “Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind,” he similarly asserted “The cost of freedom is always high, but Americans have always paid it. And one path we shall never choose, and that is the path of surrender, or submission.” His participation in the calamitous Bay of Pigs Invasion and resolution to “draw a line in the sand” concerning Vietnam only further separates him from Jackie’s antiwar idealist. Furthermore, by reworking JFK into what James Piereson labeled “the consummate liberal idealist” whose accomplishments would always be unsurpassed, Jackie made it tougher for the grief-stricken nation to move ahead. If what she contended was true, and there'd “never be another Camelot,” where could the nation go but downwards?
Undeniably, Jackie’s comparison has faults. Though JFK professed “Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind,” he similarly asserted “The cost of freedom is always high, but Americans have always paid it. And one path we shall never choose, and that is the path of surrender, or submission.” His participation in the calamitous Bay of Pigs Invasion and resolution to “draw a line in the sand” concerning Vietnam only further separates him from Jackie’s antiwar idealist. Furthermore, by reworking JFK into what James Piereson labeled “the consummate liberal idealist” whose accomplishments would always be unsurpassed, Jackie made it tougher for the grief-stricken nation to move ahead. If what she contended was true, and there'd “never be another Camelot,” where could the nation go but downwards?
From this unfathomable tragedy came Jackie Kennedy’s longest-lasting achievement. Had JFK lived, her most noteworthy accomplishment might be renovating the White House and infusing timeless glamour into the American presidency. Instead, her legacy’s become that of scrupulously manufacturing how Americans recollect her husband. It’s a vision of the much-loved president many continue to embrace, even revere, today.
For more about Jackie’s Camelot, check-out:
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
History Bitches Fieldtrip #6: Meridian Hill Park
Last Sunday, meandering back from lunch with George, he and I took a short-cut through Meridian Hill Park. As we caught-up, I paused to get a photograph of Meridian Hill’s Joan of Arc statue, the lone female equestrian sculpture in Washington, D.C. Paul Dubois’ life-size bronze figure depicts Joan, decked-out in complete body armor, gazing towards the heavens as she urges her charger ahead. Held aloft in her left hand there’s a sword. Taken in 1978, Joan's sword wasn't restored until three decades later in 2011.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Episode #13: Abe Sada, Part 2
Some considered her living proof of the hazards of female sexuality; others esteemed her for revolting against the patriarchy. Tune in for Part II as Brittany and guest-host Farron unravel the legend and legacy of Abe Sada.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Episode #13: Abe Sada, Part 2 (Show Notes)
A newspaper piece regarding Abe’s crime; Kichizo is pictured, too |
Monday, November 11, 2013
Episode #12: Abe Sada, Part 1 (Show Notes)
She perpetrated the crime of the century; cutting her name into her murdered lover’s thigh, Abe Sada left her brand on Japanese history, too. Born during a period when girls and women were compelled to obey patriarchal social customs, she revolted against the archetype.
Born in Tokyo’s Kanda neighborhood to a bourgeois family of tatami mat makers, Abe flouted conventions early. Throughout her youth and teenage years, she was infatuated by the glamorous, yet mysterious world of geishas. It was a scandalous preoccupation for a genteel, upper-middle class girl. Unsurprisingly, after her matrimonial prospects were seemingly doomed she utterly embraced the part of misfit.
Born in Tokyo’s Kanda neighborhood to a bourgeois family of tatami mat makers, Abe flouted conventions early. Throughout her youth and teenage years, she was infatuated by the glamorous, yet mysterious world of geishas. It was a scandalous preoccupation for a genteel, upper-middle class girl. Unsurprisingly, after her matrimonial prospects were seemingly doomed she utterly embraced the part of misfit.
Saturday, November 9, 2013
The Unusual Suspects
Mary Jane Kelly |
The hypothesis Jack the Ripper was in fact Jill the Ripper was first postulated by Detective Inspector Frederick Abberline of the London Metropolitan Police. His conjecture stemmed from testimony by Mrs. Caroline Maxwell. Mrs. Maxwell claimed she'd seen Mary Jane Kelly twice after doctors presumed she was murdered. The D.I. speculated the woman she'd observed the second time was actually the killer. The suspect might have disguised herself in Mary’s clothing after disposing of her own blood-soaked garments. Though Mary was discovered partially undressed, her clothing was left at the crime scene, folded neatly on a chair. Consequently, this premise doesn’t hold-up.
Thus It Be Ever With Assassins
Mary Surratt |
No. 1“Arrival on Scaffold” |
No.2 “Reading the Death Warrant” |
No.3 “Adjusting the Ropes” |
No. 4 and “Thus It Be Ever With Assassins” |
For more about Mary Surratt, check-out:
History Bitches Fieldtrip #5: Mary Surratt's Boardinghouse and Mount Olivet Cemetery
Source
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
As a teenager, Juana entered the court of Viceroy Marquis de Mancera |
Monday, November 4, 2013
Manuela Sáenz
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Gabriela Mistral
Las Hermanas Mirabal/The Mirabal Sisters
(L to R: Patricia, Marie-Teresa, and Minerva) |
National Hispanic Heritage Month
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Atonement: Remembering Japan's Comfort Women
Yesterday, the boys at Stuff You Should Know released a podcast covering revisionist history. A basic definition of historical revisionism is: the reconsidering of traditional historical narratives in light of new material, the rejection of false or subjective information, or the inclusion of forgotten/ marginalized perspectives. Listening to Josh and Chuck, I wondered how this subject affected women’s history. During a quick Google search, one issue that popped-up again and again was comfort women. I had a nebulous comprehension of the problem, and remembered glimpsing the occasional pertinent news story, but that was it. Researching the matter and its connection to revisionist history, I came to understand how it mutually exemplifies the contentious and imperative nature of reinterpreting conventional history.
Monday, October 21, 2013
The Most Terrifying Words You'll Ever Hear...
Presumably, a Nazi Bride School newbie tricking-out her dorm room. Sigh, those freshmen! |
Earlier this month, researchers combing through Germany’s Federal Archive unearthed documents concerning the Reichsbräuteschule, or Reich Bride Schools. Though scholars knew of their existence, these matrimonial preparatory schools were (and remain largely still) shrouded in mystery. The recent discovery of a rulebook and certificate of completion, give historians further understanding of this shadowy facet of Hitler’s Third Reich. And y’all, it’s just as creepy as it sounds…
Friday, October 18, 2013
I'm So Excited!
Oh my gosh! Oh my gosh!! You guys!!! AHHHH!!!! The official trailer for Amma Asante’s movie about Dido Elizabeth Belle was released earlier this week!
The U.S. release date is May 2, 2014! Who’s coming with me?
The U.S. release date is May 2, 2014! Who’s coming with me?
She Blinded Me With Science!
Monday, October 14, 2013
Episode #11: Twisted Sisters
They're selective mutes, murderous housemaids, and twins possessed by “folie à deux.” Tune-in to discover what makes June and Jennifer Gibbons, Christine and Léa Papin, and Sabina and Ursula Eriksson “twisted sisters!”
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Episode #11: Twisted Sisters (Show Notes)
The Grady sisters from director Stanley Kubrick’s horror masterpiece, The Shining (1980). |
Saturday, October 5, 2013
The Pied Pipers of Victorian England
The British Medical Journal, Vol. 1, No. 1577 (Mar. 21, 1891), p. 656 |
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Episode #10: Lavinia Fisher (Mini-cast)
Was Charleston’s Lavinia Fisher America’s first woman serial killer? Tune-in to hear the grisly legend and discover the shocking truth.
Episode #10: Lavinia Fisher (Mini-cast) Show Notes
It’s doubtful this commonly-used portrait actually depicts Lavinia Fisher |
Here’s the legend:
Lavinia and husband John operated a lodge, Six Mile House, outside of Charleston, South Carolina. The Fishers preyed on male customers travelling by themselves. Furtively, Lavinia would poison guests’ supper or tea using laudanum; later, when the man nodded-off, John would butcher them with his axe. Ultimately, one fortunate would-be victim named John Peoples got away; he alerted law enforcement. Searching the Fisher’s roadhouse, police unearthed many decaying corpses. Subsequently, Lavinia and John were arrested, tried for robbery and murder, and condemned to hang.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
History Bitches Fieldtrip #5: Mary Surratt's Boardinghouse and Mount Olivet Cemetery
Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt, c. 1850 |
Sunday, September 15, 2013
The Black Queen
Detail of Allan Ramsay’s Charlotte Sophia of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1761-1762) |
Although she is chronologically distant from Afonso III and his mistress, there is a surprising genealogical proximity between the two women and six lines of descent can be traced between them. What also contributed to the perceptibility of her African heritage was the highly inbred pattern of princely German marriage alliances.There are contemporary references to Charlotte’s African-like features, too; for example, Christian Friedrich, Baron Stockmar wrote she possessed a “true mulatto face.” These characteristics are clearly noticeable in portraits by Allan Ramsay, a prominent abolitionist, and, by marriage, the uncle of Dido Elizabeth Belle.
Can't Hardly Wait!
Amma Asante’s (hooray lady directors!!) feature film “Belle,” about History Bitch Dido Elizabeth Belle recently premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Here are some reviews:
TIFF 2013 Review: 'Belle' Starring Gugu Mbatha-Raw
Belle: Toronto 2013 - first look review
The U.S. release date is May 2, 2014!
TIFF 2013 Review: 'Belle' Starring Gugu Mbatha-Raw
Belle: Toronto 2013 - first look review
The U.S. release date is May 2, 2014!
Remembering the "Four Little Girls"
Today marks the 50th anniversary of Birmingham, Alabama’s 16th St. Baptist Church Bombing. The “four little girls” who perished, Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley, were recently awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.
For more information check-out:
Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
'Four Little Girls' Awarded Congressional Gold Medal
For more information check-out:
Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
'Four Little Girls' Awarded Congressional Gold Medal
Sunday, September 8, 2013
The Myth of Dido
Dido Elizabeth Belle (L) and half-cousin Lady Elizabeth Murray (R). This picture currently resides at Scone Palace in Perth, Scotland. |
Seeing her picture for the first time, I assumed she was a servant. Lucky for us, her status at Kenwood House, London was vastly more remarkable. Her name was Dido Elizabeth Belle, the charge and great-niece of William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield.
Dido’s father was British Navy officer, Sir John Lindsay |
Saturday, September 7, 2013
The Bitch with the Dragon Tattoo
Fantastic! Just when I’d accepted I could never be as cool as Mary Bowser, Dita Von Teese informs me I’m as not cool as Maud Wagner either. Who the heck is that?
Wait…that’s her? Crap-definitely not as cool! So, who’s Maud Wagner, and what makes this History Bitch so freaky fresh? Frustratingly, there’s not much information regarding her life. The only facts I could locate come from non-academic sources, so take everything with a grain of salt.
Wait…that’s her? Crap-definitely not as cool! So, who’s Maud Wagner, and what makes this History Bitch so freaky fresh? Frustratingly, there’s not much information regarding her life. The only facts I could locate come from non-academic sources, so take everything with a grain of salt.
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Schoolhouse Rock!
Since yesterday was our first day of school, it seemed the perfect time for a post about some of history’s most celebrated women teachers. Just so you know, I refrained from including myself.
Hypatia (350 or 370 – 415 or 416)
A citizen of Alexandria, Egypt, a cultural and educational center of the Roman and Byzantine world, Hypatia was a philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer. Besides directing the Neo-Platonist school of philosophy, she taught and became a popular lecturer. Regrettably, Hypatia is famous not just for being one of the first women to study and teach philosophy, mathematics, and astronomy, but her barbarous death. Accused of spreading heresy and provoking conflict, she was murdered by a swarm of zealous Christians.
Source 1, 2
Source 1, 2
Monday, September 2, 2013
This Is My Jam!
In 1942, Rosie the Riveter made her debut in Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb's song, "Rosie the Riveter." Check it out below.
Making History, Working for Victory
Happy Labor Day, Bitches!
Inspired by i09’s post, “SciFi and Fantasy Ladies Pose as Rosie the Riveter for Labor Day,” I decided to write a quick post about the celebrated World War II and feminist icon.
So, here are some of the 5 best facts I discovered about Rosie:
Inspired by i09’s post, “SciFi and Fantasy Ladies Pose as Rosie the Riveter for Labor Day,” I decided to write a quick post about the celebrated World War II and feminist icon.
So, here are some of the 5 best facts I discovered about Rosie:
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Episode #9: Ada "Bricktop" Smith (Show Notes)
Discovering Bricktop’s story was like flipping through a yearbook belonging to the most popular girl on campus; everybody knew her. When a young Jelly Roll Morton couldn't decide if he should take-up pimping or piano-playing, she advised that he could do both! When Duke Ellington was playing small-time clubs in D.C., Bricktop secured his first gig in New York City. And when Josephine Baker rocketed to stardom overnight, Bricktop showed her the ropes.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Episode #9: Ada "Bricktop" Smith
F. Scott Fitzgerald said his real claim to fame was not penning “This Side of Paradise” or “The Great Gatsby,” but rather discovering Bricktop before Cole Porter. Tune-in to discover more about Ada “Bricktop” Smith, “Cabaret Queen of Paris and Rome.”
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
History Mystery Game: Ready, Set, Guess!
Sunday, August 11, 2013
History Mystery Game: Clue #5
Martin Luther King, Jr., accompanied by wife Coretta Scott King, after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. |
Saturday, August 10, 2013
History Mystery Game: Clue #4
Our History Bitch makes a brief “cameo” towards the end of this clip from Woody Allen’s “Midnight in Paris.” Can you find her?
Friday, August 9, 2013
History Mystery Game: Clue #3
Josephine Baker |
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
History Mystery Game: Clue #2
Composed by George (music) and Ira (lyrics) Gershwin in 1928, “Embraceable You” was a signature piece for our History Bitch. In fact, John Steinbeck said listening to her sing it could take two decades off a man’s life! Check-out Judy Garland’s rendition of “Embraceable You” below and you'll understand why:
History Mystery Game: Clue #1
So, I've finished up show notes for the next episode, but I’m headed to San Francisco and can’t record until I'm back early next week. But, to get y'all excited, I thought we'd play a guessing game. Everyday I'll post a clue about our upcoming History Bitch. See if you can Sherlock who she is before I release the episode. Good luck! Post your guesses!
Clue #1: These famous guys and gals play supporting roles in our History Bitch’s story.
Clue #1: These famous guys and gals play supporting roles in our History Bitch’s story.
F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald |
Cole Porter |
Jack Johnson |
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor |
Thursday, August 1, 2013
History Bitches Fieldtrip #4: Hillwood Estate, Museum and Garden
Several weeks ago, I visited Hillwood, the sumptuous, sprawling estate of Marjorie Merriweather Post. Marjorie wasn't just the spectacularly rich heiress to Postum Cereal Company (now General Foods Corporation), but a talented businesswoman, too. During her lifetime, she became the wealthiest broad in America, worth a mindboggling $250 mil.
Happy Birthday Maria Mitchell!
Because I didn't already love Google enough, today’s homepage doodle honors astronomer Maria Mitchell. She is the second woman scientists featured in just a week (July 25th was Rosalind Franklin)! To celebrate, check out these facts about the birthday girl...
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Jane Austen’s So Money!
(via The Mary Sue)
For more, check-out this video from The Bank of England:
Happy Birthday Rosalind Franklin!
Check-out these five cool facts about British biophysicist, Rosalind Franklin:
1. Rosalind’s father disliked the concept of women receiving university educations, and snubbed her admittance to Cambridge. Her aunt volunteered to pay, and ultimately her father conceded.
1. Rosalind’s father disliked the concept of women receiving university educations, and snubbed her admittance to Cambridge. Her aunt volunteered to pay, and ultimately her father conceded.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Jackie Ormes: Cartoonist “Wonder Woman”
Just in time for the end of Comic Con, I stumbled on a great Tumblr post on Jackie Ormes, the first African-American woman cartoonist. Considering how frackin’ groundbreaking/awesome she was, it’s a travesty of Catwoman (2004) proportions that she’s been forgotten. But we’re going to remedy that right now; hold onto your phasers y’all, I’m ‘bout to drop some knowledge!