This is a neat little collection looking at the lives of women throughout history. It's not exhaustive, but it is revealing, offering a voice to perspectives that have too often been silenced both in history and study of the historical record.
I liked this book best when it was offering close readings of historical artifacts and documents, with a nice heaping side of commentary/speculation. I liked it least when it jumped to simplistic conclusions and made hasty assumptions, which was, unfortunately, a little too often for my liking.
One example that comes to mind is its characterization of the myth of the Cáin Adomnáin as representing a form of proto-women's rights. This fictionalized account of actual Irish laws established women as a protected noncombatant class in wars, with a stated rationale of shielding mothers from the danger of the battlefield, while also barring them from fighting in wars as they did before. Yet, the book still acts as if this is a marked improvement from women's lives being valued for their "reproductive energies" under tribal law.
Last time I checked those are exactly the same thing?
I think it's more accurate to call the Cáin Adomnáin humanitarian, or a prototype of the Geneva Convention, but the book twists its interpretation of it to try to read more "feminist" thought into it than is accurate. It certainly IS a law (or at least a fictionalized account of prior laws), pertains to women, and says their lives have meaning and should be protected. However, the way it goes about establishing that is by defining women as solely valuable for their reproductive capacity and limiting what they are legally allowed to do, even while it defends them.
Unfortunately, there are several times throughout the text where this sort of 'flattening' of the actual history happens. I think so many of these stories speak for themselves, and it's enough to focus on women's voices, stories, and circumstances without attempting embellish them or make them more 'progressive' than they were, or pretend that women had more freedom than they did.
Still, this is an interesting text with very unique selections, I hadn't heard of most of the figures highlighted, and learned quite a bit while reading. While the writing is sometimes dry, when the author's voice comes through it is insightful and witty. Despite its faults, I'd still recommend it if the topic interests you, at least as a starting off point for further research.
Favorite Quote From Another Book In This Book
"Time in its irresistible and ceaseless flow carries along on its flood all created things, and drowns them in the depths of obscurity" -Anna Comnena