Jane Kamensky is the author of A Revolution in Color: The World of John Singleton Copley, winner of the New-York Historical Society’s American History Book Prize, and professor emerita of history at Harvard University. She is the president of Monticello/the Thomas Jefferson Foundation and has previously served as director of the Schlesinger Library at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute.
"In an assiduously researched, elegantly written new biography,
Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution, the historian Jane
Kamensky makes a strong case for her subject’s story as both unique
and, in a curious way, representative."
*Margaret Talbot - The New Yorker*
"In the new biography Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution,
Kamensky puts Royalle at the center of an ambitious, ambivalent
history that aims to unsettle any idea of a conflict with firm
battle lines."
*Jennifer Schuessler - New York Times*
"[An] unexpectedly lively biography. . . . The book’s virtues
include its melding of history with diaristic intimacy and clever,
often incandescent prose."
*Julia M. Klein - Boston Globe*
"[Kamensky’s] rigor and thoroughness demand that the reader take
seriously an underdog who made her name in a stigmatized industry.
This book is a labor of empathy that refuses to simplify or
valorize its subject."
*Rich Juzwiak - The New York Times Book Review*
"Beautifully crafted. . . . Kamensky shows that the sexual
revolution was always only partly about sex. It was also about
technological transformation; about personal branding, the search
for authenticity; and about the blurring of private life and screen
life. We may think of these things as artifacts of our digital age,
but Candida Royalle knew them well. She lived her politics as many
of us live ours today, in her body and on the screen
simultaneously."
*Fred Turner - Los Angeles Review of Books*
"A tour de force, Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution is a
penetrating history of America’s least studied revolution.…
Originally conceived, impressively researched, and beautifully
written, Candida Royalle deepens and complicates our understanding
of America’s recent past."
*Alice Echols, University of Southern California, and author of Hot
Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture*
"A riveting, humane, and essential contribution to modern feminist
history. Jane Kamensky has written a biography that reads like a
novel, an astute intellectual work that recognizes and humanizes
the role of sex workers in recent women’s movements. Thanks to this
book, I am proud to recognize the place of Candida Royalle in my
own lineage."
*Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood, winner of the National Book
Critics Circle Award in Criticism*
"A rich slice of Americana, a deep dive into the era of the
pornographic movie industry and its feminist adversaries, told
through the unexpectedly moving story of a woman, Candice Vadala,
who tried, and failed, to make peace between the two sides.
Whatever your views about porn, when you read Jane Kamensky’s
beautifully sympathetic and clear-eyed biography, you will find
yourself rooting for Candice, a woman struggling heroically to
redeem a difficult life."
*Louis Menand, author of The Free World: Art and Thought in the
Cold War*
"Porn star Candida Royalle dared to bring feminist questions to the
business of sex. Couldn’t there be a porn that would tamp down the
degradation and misogyny? Couldn’t women claim space for their own
fantasies? Did we all have to fit in at the Playboy Mansion? Jane
Kamensky’s vital and illuminating account of Candida’s bruised life
and uphill struggle to radically change porn from within asks us to
consider the true meaning of sexual liberation."
*Cynthia Carr, author of Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon,
Superstar*
"Jane Kamensky has written a groundbreaking, cinematic, and
sensitive portrait of an unlikely heroine: Candida Royalle, the
adult film actress and director who pushed herself from the margins
of porn to the center of the sex wars in the 1970s and ’80s.
Kamensky understands exactly what Royalle gained, and lost, in her
bid for sexual freedom and artistic independence. This is more than
a biography of one woman who experienced the perils and pleasures
of the sexual revolution ‘from below’—it is a brilliant, sweeping,
and tragic history of desire, feminism, and sex in postwar
America."
*Heather Clark, author of Pulitzer Prize finalist Red Comet: The
Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath*
"Powerful. . . . A captivating biography of a major figure of the
sexual revolution."
*Publishers Weekly*
"Kamensky traces the full arc of her subject’s life, from a
childhood rife with tumult and abuse to her 2015 death from cancer.
. . . Following Vadala’s lead, Kamensky’s biography refuses the
binary between a pleasure-driven feminism and a victim-driven one
to show how sex work and its cultures can be both liberating and
oppressive."
*Maggie Taft - Booklist*
"Working extensively with Vadala's diaries, historian Kamensky sets
the porn actress and producer's life and career in parallel with
the wider events of '60s and '70s counterculture, second-wave
feminism, and anti-pornography crusade, and the changing landscape
of pornography itself. . . . This in-depth biography makes a good
argument that Vadala is an unsung history maker."
*Kathleen McCallister - Library Journal*
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