What was mothering like in the past?
Sarah Knott grew up in England. Educated at Oxford University, she is now a professor of history at Indiana University and a fellow of the Kinsey Institute. She is the author of Sensibility and the American Revolution and numerous articles on the histories of women, gender, and emotion. Knott has served as an editor of the American Historical Review, the American Historical Association's flagship journal, and sits on the editorial board of Past and Present. She has held many fellowships including from the Andrew Mellon foundation, the Rothermere American Institute, and the Oxford Centre for Life Writing.
Wonderful... utterly compelling. This is history at its best:
writing that unfolds the past and sheds light on the present
*Financial Times*
A joy to read, borne of raw curiosity and intelligence, nurtured
into the world to fill a gap in understanding.
*New York Times*
Knott manages to combine scholarship with personal experience in a
heartfelt and original way. Every mother-to-be should read it
*Sunday Times*
A stunning book. Mother: An Unconventional History is a dextrous
blend of autobiography and anthropology and social history, but
above all love and a woman's desire to be a mother. It is riveting
from beginning to end
*Diane Atkinson, author of 'Rise Up Women!: The Remarkable Lives of
the Suffragettes'*
Mother is a timely and fascinating investigation into one of the
most overlooked and yet fundamental human experiences. Sarah Knott
expertly weaves together a narrative that succeeds in being both
intensely personal but also reassuringly historical.
*Amanda Foreman, bestselling author of 'Georgiana, Duchess of
Devonshire'*
Lyrically evocative and richly textured, Mother sets fragments of
female lives over the last four centuries in Britain and North
America within a narrative of Sarah Knott's own experiences to
produce a remarkable history - exploratory, pointillist, and
intensely personal - of what it is, and has been, to be a
mother.
*Helen Castor, author of 'She-Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England
Before Elizabeth'*
In this innovative, grippingly readable history, Sarah Knott has
woven a scintillating tapestry of ideas and experiences across
time. Mother is a moving and enlightening meditation on the most
elemental, yet ceaselessly varied, of all human bonds.
*Fara Dabhoiwala, author of 'The Origins of Sex'*
A remarkable book. Sarah Knott weaves an intimate account of
becoming a mother into a richly-documented history of maternity.
Eloquent and evocative, this is a book to savour and share with
anyone who loves great history-writing.
*Barbara Taylor, author of 'Eve and the New Jerusalem' and 'The
Last Asylum'*
This fabulous book manages both to recreate what those
extraordinary early months of motherhood are like, and make sense
of them by placing them in history. Knott's diary of motherhood is
poetic: she conveys that sense that time has stopped, that only the
baby's reflux matters, the heightened power of smell, the loss of
self. The historical anecdotes Knott provides are riveting, and
open up new ways of understanding what motherhood can be. The pace
of it all is perfect - slow, and focused,- just as growth has its
own imperceptible rhythms. This is a new kind of history-writing. A
truly original, inspiring book.
*Lyndal Roper, Regius Professor of History, Oxford*
Fascinating and beautifully written. A book I will feverishly press
on others - both as an exploration of unheard histories and as a
companion to pregnancy and early motherhood
*Rebecca Schiller, author of Your No-Guilt Pregnancy Plan*
In this beautifully written book, Sarah Knott speaks from the
vantage point of a mother and a historian. Full of stories ranging
across time, space, and ethnicity, with imagery that touches all
our senses, Mother captures the physicality and emotions of
motherhood, so that even those of us who have never experienced it
ourselves feel what it is like to get pregnant, give birth, and
raise a child.
*Nancy Shoemaker, author of 'A Strange Likeness'*
Which mother hasn't wondered how other mothers have managed, in
different circumstances? Sarah Knott describes, for example, how a
mother looked after her baby in a seventeenth-century East Anglian
village; how another was a mistress of King Charles II; and a third
was a slave on a North Carolina plantation. She has read through an
extraordinary amount of rare diaries and letters, and then used her
own sensitive imagination to bring these fragments to life. Each
description is short, often only a page or two, so a mother who has
just a few minutes to read before the next interruption can
realistically hope to get to the end of one example, and then take
that mother's situation with her, to think about, as she returns to
her own. Sarah Knott had two children while she was researching and
writing. Her examples are grouped in chronological order of her
experience, but with unusual headings, such as 'Finding Out' that a
woman is pregnant, 'Quickening', 'Damp Cloth', and 'The Middle of
the Night'. The focus throughout is on mothers, and there is very
little on how their babies are responding. But perhaps we readers
are required to wake up some imagination of our own.
*Naomi Stadlen, bestselling author of 'What Mothers Do’*
With the skill of a twenty-first-century mother juggling numerous
professional and caring responsibilities, Sarah Knott's Mother
expertly pulls off a delicate balancing act. Knott's poignant
personal memoir of pregnancy, birth, feeding and beyond
encapsulates its bloody, milky, hormonal immediacy, whilst, at the
same time, she finds in each moment an echo of history, a thread
situating her among women - their bodies, communities and cultural
practices - across centuries and continents.
*Dr Rachel Hewitt*
This lyrical book-one-third memoir, two-thirds history-guides us
through centuries of pregnancy, childbirth, and infant care. Knott
stitches her personal story to vignettes from the past and shows us
how everyday mothering differed in time and place. With stunning
prose, she gives us the sensory shorn of the sentimental. A
riveting read
*Joanne Meyerowitz, author of 'How Sex Changed: A History of
Transsexuality in the United States'*
An original and important account of a universal but neglected
experience. Mother powerfully conveys the thrilling, bewildering,
and fuzzy-headed atmosphere that surrounds pregnancy and
childbirth, and offers a fascinating glimpse into the world of our
mothering predecessors.
*Herald*
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