Boston, MA – Harvard Book Store / In conversation with Drew Gilpin Faust

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Boston, MA – Harvard Book Store / In conversation with Drew Gilpin Faust

March 10 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Ellen Carol DuBois (Photo Credit Scarlett Freund)Ellen Carol DuBois (Photo Credit Scarlett Freund)
Drew Gilpin FaustDrew Gilpin Faust

Date

Tuesday, March 10, 2026 – 7:00pm

Location

Harvard Book Store

1256 Massachusetts Ave.,
Cambridge, MA 02138

Ticket

This event is free; no tickets are required.

Harvard Book Store welcomes Ellen Carol DuBois—distinguished professor of history at UCLA and preeminent historian of women’s suffrage—for a discussion of her new book, Elizabeth Cady Stanton: A Revolutionary Life. She will be joined in conversation by Drew Gilpin Faust—award-winning American historian and former President of Harvard.

About Elizabeth Cady Stanton

The definitive biography of American suffragist and women’s rights pioneer Elizabeth Cady Stanton, from a preeminent historian of women’s suffrage

Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a singular leader, thinker, and organizer whose fight for women’s emancipation stretched from the 1840s to her death in 1902, a full fifth of America’s history. Yet her legacy has been marked by controversy. In this landmark biography, eminent historian Ellen Carol DuBois paints a fresh portrait of this complex crusader whose tireless work made contemporary feminism possible.

Born in 1815 into a family deeply marked by the tumult of the American Revolution and surging evangelicalism, Stanton was captivated by Enlightenment ideas about individual freedom and transformed by early experiences in what she called “the school of antislavery.” Though most remembered for her fight for the vote, she was also an early crusader for women’s reproductive autonomy and reforming the institution of marriage, and against Christianity’s subordination of women. Her rifts with Black reformers and embrace of nativist ideas tarnished her reputation, but her words still have the ability to move and agitate people today.

Building upon exhaustive archival research and a deep engagement with Stanton’s copious writings, Elizabeth Cady Stanton brilliantly captures a crucial reformer in all of her intelligence, moral ambiguity, and power.

Praise for Elizabeth Cady Stanton

“The life of Elizabeth Cady Stanton still has much to teach us. The invented prisons of race, sex, and class are still with us, but learning about successful past struggles against them can help to equalize the future.” —Gloria Steinem

“A major figure deserves a matching biographer, and here, in this book, Elizabeth Cady Stanton has found hers. Out of a mind and spirit rich in knowledge and devotion, Ellen Dubois has fashioned a distinguished biography that secures Stanton’s unique place, once and for all, in the American movement for women’s rights. A pleasure to read.” —Vivian Gornick

“DuBois’s Elizabeth Cady Stanton is a must-read biography! This lavish accounting and analysis of one of the most important women in U.S. history and women’s history by one of the nation’s most brilliant historians of women opens up a world of domesticity and activism, as well as personal, social, and national evolution that is a layered revelation to anyone interested in U.S. history. DuBois is a seasoned researcher and excellent writer who brings new insight into the personal life, political growth, and social world of this essential pioneer in women’s rights across many decades of America’s evolution as a nation of many peoples, voices, and struggles.” —Brenda E. Stevenson, University of California, Los Angeles

“At once critical and empathetic, Ellen Dubois’s biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton revives a leading American intellectual and feminist whose devotion to women’s rights, liberal individualism, and natural law increasingly came into conflict with beliefs in racial and human equality. By exploring Stanton’s intellectual evolution, Dubois reveals much about both the nineteenth-century and modern United States.” —Richard White, author of The Republic for Which It Stands

Bios

Ellen Carol DuBois is distinguished professor of history at UCLA. Her pioneering works on the US woman suffrage movement include Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an Independent Women’s Movement in America, 1848–1869, Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage, and Suffrage: Women’s Long Battle for the Vote. She lives in Los Angeles.

Drew Gilpin Faust grew up in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley and received her B.A. from Bryn Mawr College, magna cum laude and her M.A. and Ph.D from the University of Pennsylvania. She served on the faculties of Penn and Harvard for nearly a half century and was President of Harvard from 2007 to 2018. She is author of seven books, including National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize finalist This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War. Her most recent book is a memoir, Necessary Trouble: Growing Up at Midcentury (2023). In 2018 Faust was awarded the John W. Kluge Prize for Achievement in the Study of Humanity.

Masking Policy

Masks are encouraged but not required for this event

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