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Harriet Beecher Stowe had Moorish slippers : the oriental roots of domesticity / Marsha R....
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Harriet Beecher Stowe had Moorish slippers : the oriental roots of domesticity / Marsha R. Robinson-Barber
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Description
Identifier
Thesis
1576
Author
Robinson-Barber, Marsha R
Title
Harriet
Beecher
Stowe
had
Moorish
slippers
: the
oriental
roots
of
domesticity
/
Marsha
R
.
Robinson-Barber
Publisher
Central Connecticut State University
Date
1999
Resource Type
Master's Thesis
Notes
"
Harriet
Beecher
Stowe
Had
Moorish
Slippers
: The
Oriental
Roots
of
Domesticity
"
is
an
attempt
to
chart
the
nineteenth
century
relationship
between
the
creation
of
woman's
sphere
, the
gender
segregated
world
of
American
elite
women
, and the
Oriental
Renaissance
as
revealed
through
references
to
oriental
fascination
in the
biographies
of
Harriet
Beecher
Stowe
and her
family
. The
resulting
theory
is
that the
restriction
of
women
to the
domestic
sphere
can
be
seen
as an
incomplete
imitation
of
Eastern
women's
culture
, an
idea
which
was
imported
and
emulated
as
Europe
and
America
increased
their
participation
in the
Ottoman-controlled
global
market
. The
first
chapter
, "
Forges
and
Footes
"
highlights
the
changing
place
of
women
in the
Beecher
family
tree
, from the
very
public
role
played
by
British
immigrant
Hannah
Beecher
to the
secluded
life
led
by
Roxana
Foote
Beecher
,
Harriet's
mother
. This
section
also
shows
that the
Beecher
children
inherited
their
ambition
from their
mothers
'
families
,
whose
relatives
included
several
politicians
and
military
leaders
.
Lyman
Beecher
managed
to
constrain
his
children's
efforts
to the
pulpit
and the
pen
. The
second
chapter
, "
Moorish
Slippers
"
discusses
the
political
and
economic
interactions
of the
West
with the
East
,
ending
with the
Europe
poised
to
dominate
the
Ottoman
controlled
trade
routes
.
Samuel
Foote
,
Harriet's
maternal
uncle
, was
very
cosmopolitan
and an
expert
on
Islamic
and
Catholic
cultures
. He
gained
his
expertise
by
immersing
himself
in the
many
languages
and
cultures
of the
Mediterranean
and
Latin
America
.
Using
primary
sources
, the
author
demonstrates
that
other
sea
captains
and
mariners
also had
opportunity
to
acquire
cultural
knowledge
if they
felt
so
inclined
.
Harriet's
Moorish
slippers
, a
gift
from her
uncle
,
represent
centuries
of
international
trade
and
Western
exposure
to the then
dominant
Eastern
cultures
. The
third
chapter
, "
Nights
in
Araby
"
expands
the
West's
exposure
to the
East
through
a
discussion
of the
Oriental
Renaissance
,
especially
in the
European
literary
realm
. This
exploration
finds
that
Harriet
Beecher
Stowe
was
representative
of a
general
fascination
with the
Arabian
Nights
.
Several
of the
great
English
and
American
writers
admit
to
loving
and
outright
mimicking
the
stories
in the
tales
.
Scholars
of the
Oriental
Renaissance
period
were also
extracting
factual
knowledge
from the
Arabic
sources
,
knowledge
later
used
and
augmented
by the
West
in the
Industrial
Revolution
and the
later
drive
to
build
empires
. The
fourth
and
fifth
chapters
, "
Startling
Facts
" and "
Hoops
and
Harems
"
focus
on the
links
between
Eastern
and
Western
women's
culture
. The
fourth
chapter
explores
Samuel
Foote's
claim
that "
Turks
are
more
honest
than
Christians
" in the
treatment
of
women
.
Various
forms
of
Western
polygamy
were
practiced
by
relatively
prosperous
Western
men
, as
noted
by
writers
from
Foote's
lifetime
. The
last
chapter
finds
four
points
which
characterize
a
backward
society
in
regards
to the
way
in
which
women
are
treated
according
to
American
missionary
philosophy
. These
four
points
are
shown
to
directly
apply
to
nineteenth
century
American
culture
. The
conclusion
of this
thesis
is
that
domesticity
is
the
West's
imitation
of
Eastern
harem
culture
.
Several
writers
of the
time
agreed
that
Western
women
of the
era
were
trained
to
live
in
imitation
harems
.
Evidence
accumulated
in this
thesis
suggests
that
Catharine
Beecher
and
other
pro-woman
writers
recognized
this
harem
lifestyle
and
sought
to
acquire
the
legal
rights
women
had in
Islam
for
women
in the
West
.
Subject
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896 -- Family
Women -- Conduct of life -- 19th century
Women -- Social conditions -- 19th century
United States -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Oriental influences
Department
Department of History
Advisor
Prescott, Heather Munro
Type
Text
Digital Format
application/pdf
Language
eng
OCLC number
45225047
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