Parlor Politics
In Which the Ladies of Washington Help Build a City and a Government
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Virginia Press
Published:31st Mar '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This non-fiction paperback, "Parlor Politics" from Catherine Allgor, was published 31st March 2002 by University of Virginia Press.
For those whose knowledge of early Washington and its politics is in need of repair, Parlor Politics provides a fresh perspective and rich details - history at its most readable. - Washington Post Book World ""Parlor Politics is a stimulating, lively, and subtle book that enlarges our understanding of how, in just half a century, Washington City became an important world capital."" - Wall Street Journal ""In her important and delightfully written book Parlor Politics, Catherine Allgor describes the various ways genteel elite women during the first decades of the nineteenth century used 'social events' and the 'private sphere' to establish the national capital and to build the extraofficial structures so sorely needed in the infant federal government."" - New York Review of Books ""In this scholarly yet animated and thought-provoking analysis, Allgor presents her groundbreaking research on the critical role that women played in the early days of Washington politics."" - Publishers Weekly ""A wonderful, scholarly book that will make historiographical waves for years to come. An alternative to Joseph Ellis's Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, this book is a must for gender, social, cultural, and political historians and their students."" - Choice
ISBN: 9780813921181
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 510g
320 pages