cover image Divided We Stand: The Battle Over Women’s Rights and Family Values That Polarized American Politics

Divided We Stand: The Battle Over Women’s Rights and Family Values That Polarized American Politics

Marjorie J. Spruill. Bloomsbury USA, $30 (448p) ISBN 978-1-63286-314-0

In this parable of how sensible and practical paths toward broader equality get overwhelmed by threat, fear, and bigotry, historian Spruill (New Women of the New South) suggests that the current political landscape of paralyzing divisiveness, hateful rhetoric, and persistent obstructionism took form in 1977, when the two women’s movements of the 1970s, each side purporting to represent the majority or speak for “real” American women, came to a head at the National Women’s Conference in Houston. Incensed that political equality would infringe on their privileges, a small group of opponents to the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) organized and mobilized a bloc of religious and socially conservative women with the threat that an overreaching government was out to destroy the American family and traditional, Bible-based morals. Meanwhile, those in favor of the ERA rallied diverse women with a victorious vision of full human rights. Spruill remains evenhanded in her treatment, tracing the tensions within each group and among their supporters. The lasting outcome of the failed ERA, Spruill reveals, was the embrace of social conservatives into the Republican party. They brought an antiabortion, profamily platform that propelled Reagan to the presidency and has since been a GOP mainstay. Spruill’s narrative is detailed and precise; her blow-by-blow accounts and alternating chapters of moves and countermoves allows for repetition and lacks meaningful analysis, but her rigorous research and intense accuracy will make this an indispensible handbook on the history of the National Women’s Conference and its enduring legacy on American politics. [em]Agent: Lisa Adams, Garamond Agency. (Feb.) [/em]