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My Brilliant Career
  Hi. Im
Linda Ford, bookseller, former history professor, and historian of women. My latest effort
is a feminist history of women's basketball called "Lady Hoopsters." As a child
of the 50s in Central New York, I played sports with my brother, helped out on the family
farm, and for just about every other waking hour, read everything I could get my hands on.
The first thing I remember writing after getting beyond using a pencil that was four
inches around, was an essay on "My Antonia", which I did in sixth or seventh
grade. My teacher, Mrs. Pettigrew, liked it, but it must have been a really depressing
piece, because the one thing I remember from it is the line, "And the look and smell
of death were all around." It seems like there was a bear hunt or something. I went
away (but not that far) to college at SUNY Albany where I continued to like to hang out in
the library and soaked up my college experiences like a sponge. My college writing was
uneven to say the least. A Creative Writing teacher told me I was derivative (of Victoria
Holt probably) with too many ". . . . .
." and my chosen history paper topics tended toward things like a
psychohistorical analysis of folk songs. (They're very gory, violent and misogynistic.) I
liked my classes, and I also played on my college softball team, met lots of outlandish
people and helped to block the Northway in Albany in May of 1970, after Kent State. Shaped
by the idealism of the 60s, Ive always remained leftist and militantly feminist, not
always a comfortable thing. In the late 70s, my feminism took the form of founding and
leading a NOW chapter in Saratoga Springs, NY.
Out in the work world I was a
waitress, secretary, high school teacher and piano tuner. I also spent a year teaching
English and piano in Israel, which is where I met my husband Ira (webmaster
extraordinaire--he did this page.) Determined to be doing history again, I got my Ph. D.
from Syracuse University in 84, and was the first ever to petition for and receive a
minor in womens history at Syracuse. After graduate school, I played gypsy academic
for four years, teaching at New Mexico State, Cornell, Union College and Moorhead
(Minnesota) State, before landing a more or less tenure-track position at Keene (New
Hampshire) State, where I taught for seven years---U.S., social, and especially,
womens history. I left greatly disillusioned with "academe"
(elitism/sexism/classism and enormous pressures to teach at a low standarddont
get me started), but a love of womens history intact. Intact enough so that last
spring (2006), I taught a course at Colgate University called "Women's Suffrage,
Women's Rights" and that was highly satisfying. So now my husband Ira and I own
Half Moon Books, a used and rare book business back in Central New York, near my old high
school in Madison. So I can be surrounded by great books, while I continue to try my
hand at writing. My favorite writing subject continues to tend toward radical strong
women: militant suffragists, farm women, and athletes.
I published a book called Iron-Jawed Angels: The Suffrage
Militancy of the National Womans Party, 1912-1919,
in 1991 (University Press of America) which won a Gustavus Meyers Award for Human Rights.
I also contributed a chapter on my militants, "Alice Paul and the Triumph of
Militancy" to One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering
the Womans Suffrage Movement, edited by Marjorie Spruill Wheeler, published in
1995. I agreed to revisit Alice Paul and the militants for a book which Oxford University
Press did--the more press for feminist militancy the better!--called Votes for Women.
That was out in the spring of '02. I wrote an article which appeared in Mid
America in the Fall of 95; its on women farm activists of the 30s Farmers
Holiday movement. Ive also written on the radical farm women of 1930s New York State
(New York History Fall 94), on the women in William Penns life (Quaker
History, Fall 84), and on Syracuse Universitys pioneer women doctors (Syracuse,
Winter 84). The latest book as noted, is Lady Hoopsters: A History of Womens Basketball in
America. And the publisher--is us! We decided to do it
ourselves, with a little help from a printer in Nebraska. Since "Lady Hoopsters"
is one of the only narrative history of women's basketball around, I'm really proud of it.
For further descriptions and excerpts, or to order, click below.
Iron-Jawed
Angels | Triumph of Militancy | Lady
Hoopsters
You can write me at: Linda
Ford<lford@usadatanet.net>
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