A Woman's Case for Equality
Ratings1
Average rating4.5
Lucy Ann Lobdell (1829-1912) was an ordinary woman whose extraordinary life was shaped by personal strife and the hardship of life in early nineteenth-century upstate New York. Struggling with an abusive husband, a young child, ailing parents, and financial strain, Lucy did what was necessary to support her family. In a rural world defined by farming and lumbering, she dressed, labored, and lived in a traditional masculine role. Educated and eloquent, Lucy penned and published, Lucy Ann Lobdell, the Female Hunter of Delaware and Sullivan Counties, N.Y., in 1855. The narrative provides a unique look at the persecution of a woman whose only "offense" was disregard for contemporary societal norms. As Lisa Macchia Ohliger demonstrates in The Narrative of Lucy Ann Lobdell: A Woman's Case for Equality, Lucy embodied the nascent women's rights movement. At the same time, and not far from where Lucy lived and went to school, Amelia Bloomer was advocating the right for women to wear pants and was publishing the feminist newspaper, The Lily, while Susan B. Anthony was pushing for land rights and equal pay for women. All of these issues are found in Lucy's account. Lucy's life is an illustration of the historical significance and destructive power of gender in society, and her narrative bears painful witness to the clash between taboo and survival.
Reviews with the most likes.
I'll be honest and say that I picked this physical copy up on a camping trip near where Lucy Ann/Joseph lived solely due to the idea that this person may have been transgender. But having read this, it feels more like the sort of “sworn virgin” type of life that many women in the wild west era of history did to keep themselves going (the references to sexual perversions and genital appearance aside). The preface and epilogue sections highlight a lot of the better parts of the narrative in a way that finally getting past both to read the actual narrative felt like a letdown. All the good parts were already discussed!
Any woman living today understands the plea at the end of the narrative and it's sad to me that we're still fighting for this. But also poor Mr. Slater, fighting to feel like a protector for someone too independent to need him. Strange that he would abandon them when they were actually about to need him most. Some mystery is to be had on both their accounts of their life together. Neither seemed to add up to the truth.
Anyway. This is an interesting, rare find of a first hand account of the times. Only available digitally as an e-book that's somehow more expensive than the physical copy. And only two places have copies of their original manuscript? They belong alongside Calamity Jane as an icon of that time.