H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-Women@h-net.msu.edu (December, 1999)
J. William T. Youngs. Eleanor Roosevelt: A Personal and Public
Life. 2nd Edition. New York: Longman, 2000. xv + 286 pp.
Illustrations, notes, and index. $21.95 (paper), ISBN
0-321-04372-3.
Reviewed for H-Women by Stacy A. Cordery ,
Department of History, Monmouth College
Eleanor Roosevelt for Undergraduates
J. William T. Youngs, professor of History at Eastern Washington
University, has updated and slightly lengthened his 1985 first
edition of Eleanor Roosevelt: A Personal and Public Life in
response to the massive amount of new scholarship on this
much-studied First Lady. His preface explains that the "amended
sections include material on Eleanor Roosevelt's relationship
with Lorena Hickok, her stance on the Equal Rights Amendment,
her contributions to civil rights, her wartime activities, and
her postwar liberalism," but that the "fundamental design of the
book remains as it was in the first edition" (xi). That design
is an attempt to provide a balanced treatment of, as his
subtitle states, both the private woman and the public figure.
Youngs wants to explain how the social crusader, the
globetrotting First Lady, and the faithful wife all had their
genesis in ER's childhood and were sustained by ER's circle of
friends.
For the most part, he succeeds. Despite, however, the author's
claim to incorporate recent scholarship, and their inclusion in
his "A Note on the Sources," this second edition neglects the
ground-breaking findings of Blanche Wiesen Cook, Allida Black,
Maureen Beasley, and Betty Boyd Caroli, among others.[1]
Neither is it a balanced treatment of Eleanor Roosevelt. Youngs
calls her "virtually an American saint," whose early sufferings
gave birth to "the person whom many regard as the greatest
American woman of the twentieth century" (13). Youngs's ER
doesn't have a temper, is never cross and seldom frustrated, and
attained her exalted state helped mainly by the inspiration of
her father Elliott Roosevelt and the positions of her husband
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. One consequence of this
hagiographical slant, and perhaps of the fact that the book is
written for high school and undergraduate students, is Youngs's
conclusion that ER's "saintlike capacity for love" (138)
precluded any sort of sexual relationship with Lorena Hickok
(183) or Earl Miller (167). Youngs credits "fundamental loyalty
to Franklin" and her "reticence about sex" for ER's chastity
(183).
On many matters of interpretation, Youngs fundamentally
disagrees with Eleanor Roosevelt's biographer Blanche Wiesen
Cook, and readers who appreciate Cook's multi-faceted portrayal
of ER will chafe at Youngs's work. Perhaps it is not fair to
compare the two, as Youngs was constrained by a page limit and
wrote for a very different audience than did Cook.[2]
Just as Joseph Lash subtitled his second volume on ER The Years
Alone, negating in three words the extensive and effective
network of friends that surrounded Roosevelt and insinuating
that the only time she was not alone was when her husband was
alive, so Youngs offers a lopsided portrait.[3] He concentrates
on the young Eleanor to show how she triumphed over her myriad
troubles, but this leaves ER's most productive years undetailed.
Of the 265 pages of text, only 88 (plus the Prologue) are
devoted to the First Lady years and afterward. This imbalance
was the principal flaw in the first edition. Because of it,
power brokers like Molly Dewson are covered in one sentence, and
Mary McLeod Bethune in four. Strangely, however, despite the
seven-chapter emphasis on ER's pre-First Lady years, there is no
mention anywhere of Anna Roosevelt Cowles, the intrepid aunt who
made the critical decision to send Eleanor off to Allenswood
school, taught ER all about Washington politics, and served as
both sage and refuge for her niece from her very earliest years.
Theodore Roosevelt's influence upon and competition with Elliott
is missing, and there is no real explanation of Martha Bulloch
Roosevelt, ER's paternal grandmother. Details about ER's
parents' lives could probably be omitted from a book of this
length, except that the author chose to devote two chapters to
the years before Elliott's death.
The book opens with an excellent Prologue, "The South Pacific,
1943," which neatly conveys ER's superstar status as wartime
First Lady, her notable compassion as she tended maimed and
wounded Allied soldiers, and her private struggle to maintain a
positive attitude despite personal contact with the ravages of
war. Eleanor Roosevelt: A Personal and Public Lifethen
returns to the beginning of Roosevelt's life, making fine
connections between the severity of her childhood and the
resultant beneficent nature that blossomed in adulthood. Elliott
is the central figure, and he looms large throughout the rest of
the book. In fact, the book concludes with the assertion that
Elliott "taught" ER "to be compassionate" (265). The
relationship here between Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt
stresses their devotion to each other despite FDR's betrayal of
their marriage vows. The trajectory of ER's convoluted
relationship with her mother-in-law, Sara Delano Roosevelt,
makes plain ER's ultimate mastery of herself and the concomitant
shift in her role from needy and powerless daughter-in-law to
equal.
The book traces ER's early involvement in public activism before
the White House years in a chapter entitled "Grief" and sets
those works against the Lucy Mercer affair. The next chapter,
"Public Service" continues the tale in the 1920s, and describes
her work with the Democratic Party and the Women's Trade Union
League, her friendship with Marion Dickerman and Nancy Cook, and
introduces Lorena Hickok. ER's accomplishments as First Lady
are covered briefly in the next chapter, while "The Democratic
Crusade" is devoted to ER's multi-faceted work during World War
II. The book concludes with "On Her Own," and focuses on ER's
diplomatic role in the United Nations. In this chapter
undergraduates will find the complicated negotiating done by ER
and the circumstances necessary for the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights carefully and clearly explicated by Youngs.
That said, there are some niggling choices that stand out as
probably unnecessarily thoughtless. While it may have been an
effort to explain the strictures of the era's social code,
Elliott Roosevelt seems preoccupied with sex ("convention was a
jailer...holding their passions in check" (15); his intended
had "a stunning figure" (18); "Elliott had probably known women
during his days as a world traveler....Elliott must have yearned
to make love to his beautiful fiancee" (19)). ER remembered "a
nice colored peddlar" (60); the word "darkies" is used twice,
and without an explanation of the historical context of the term
(199 and 201). During World War I, "pretty girls pinned badges
on men" (127). The United States is referred to as "she" (219).
ER "felt alive and womanly in the company of [the] handsome
young man," David Gurewitsch (259). Alice Roosevelt Longworth is
incorrectly identified as Alice Roosevelt (122).
More than once, the author puts words in ER's mouth (153).
Since there are no footnotes, readers cannot track down these
direct quotes or the times, for example, that "Eleanor turned
pale" (260). The indexing is not perfect. For instance, one of
the two mentions of Molly Dewson is not on page 171 but on page
170. Dickerman and Cook appear on page 167, while Marie
Souvestre is discussed on page 78, but none of those appear in
the index; Alice Roosevelt Longworth isn't in the index at all.
This is one of three short biographies of Eleanor Roosevelt
intended for classroom use.[4] While flawed, it would still work
in undergraduate survey courses, especially as the author
successfully conveys a sense of Roosevelt's era and persona. The
historical context for ER's birth is very helpful. The book
would stimulate useful discussion in a course on women's history
or history and biography. It contains an annotated "Note on the
Sources," which will lead students to both primary and secondary
works, but not every section has been updated, so professors
will want to augment it. The illustrations are wonderful. All
of them were used in the first edition. Most of them show ER
flourishing in the middle of her work, surrounded by admirers,
and they support Youngs's point about ER's need to be active and
useful.
Eleanor Roosevelt: A Personal and Public Life, as part of
Oscar Handlin's Library of American Biography, is meant to teach
students how a biographical study of an important First Lady and
social activist can illuminate the larger fabric of history.
This, the book does very well. With additional explanation of
the New Deal and the second world war, and of the First Lady's
place in them, Youngs's work will no doubt serve competently in
the classroom.
Notes
[1]. Blanche Wiesen Cook, Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume One,
1884-1933 (New York: Viking Press, 1992) and Eleanor
Roosevelt, Volume Two, 1933-1938 (New York: Viking Press,
1999); Allida Black, Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt
and the Shaping of Postwar Liberalism (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1996); Maurine Beasley,Eleanor Roosevelt and
the Media: A Public Quest for Self-Fulfillment (Carbondale:
University of Illinois Press, 1987); and Betty Boyd Caroli, The
Roosevelt Women (New York: Basic Books, 1998). Also neglected
are Lois Sharf, Eleanor Roosevelt: First Lady of American
Liberalism(Boston: Twayne, 1987), and Rodger Streitmatter,
Empty Without You: The Intimate Letters of Eleanor Roosevelt
and Lorena Hickok (New York: The Free Press, 1998).
[2]. Cook's two volumes combined run to 1026 pages.
[3]. Joseph Lash, Eleanor: The Years Alone (New York:
Norton, 1972). Youngs uses that phrase for the title of his
concluding chapter as well as elsewhere: "Eleanor's best
friend, her essential friend, during her years alone was a
handsome physician named David Gurewitsch" (258-259). The phrase
may have been inspired by the title ER gave to the third volume
of her autobiography,On My Own: The Years Since the White
House (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1958), but critics still
maintained that it's one thing for ER to write it and quite
another for historians to accept it uncritically.
[4]. James Baker, Eleanor Roosevelt: First Lady, in the
Creators of the American Mind series (Fort Worth: Harcourt
Brace, 1999). This book is written specifically for
undergraduates. It weaves together primary documents, excerpts
from ER biographers and other historians, and so is not a
traditional biography. It also contains questions for review
and suggested essay topics. Lois Sharf's Eleanor Roosevelt:
First Lady of American Liberalism is a narrative biography in
the Twayne series and can also be used in the classroom.
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