The southern women's reform movement emerged late in the nineteenth
century, several decades behind the formation of the northern
feminist movement.
The Enclosed Garden explains this delay
by examining the subtle and complex roots of women's identity to
disclose the structures that defined -- and limited -- female
autonomy in the South.
Jean Friedman demonstrates how the evangelical communities, a
church-directed, kin-dominated society, linked plantation, farm,
and town in the predominantly rural South. Family networks and the
rural church were the princple influences on social relationships
defining sexual, domestic, marital, and work roles. Friedman argues
that the church and family, more than the institution of slavery,
inhibited the formation of an antebellum feminist movement. The
Civil War had little effect on the role of southern women because
the family system regrouped and returned to the traditional social
structure. Only with the onset of modernization in the late
nineteenth century did conditions allow for the beginnings of
feminist reform, and it began as an urban movement that did not
challenge the family system.
Friedman arrives at a new understanding of the evolution of
Victorian southern women's identity by comparing the experiences of
black women and white women as revealed in church records, personal
letters, and slave narratives. Through a unique use of dream
analysis, Friedman also shows that the dreams women described in
their diaries reveal their struggle to resolve internal conflicts
about their families and the church community. This original study
provides a new perspective on nineteenth-century southern social
structure, its consequences for women's identity and role, and the
ways in which the rural evangelical kinship system resisted
change.