This is a seminal three-volume work, that covers the history of women
throughout the world, from earliest times to the present. Marilyn
French, internationally bestselling author of The Women's Room, has
spent over two decades with a team of researchers and historians
examining women's roles and activities in various civilizations and
societies throughout the ages. This volume investigates the role of
women in society from feudal times up to the French Revolution. She
begins with Europe and Japan, two countries vastly different in culture
and tradition, yet similar in their male-dominated aggression and
competitiveness. In all these different countries in all these different
times, Marilyn French keeps asking the question: How did it happen that
women had no power and no independence, that they suffered constant
abuse and yet they nourished the family unit and preserved their culture
and society? Along the way she provides vivid portraits of exceptional
women such as Eleanor of Aquitaine, Joan of Arc, Sor Juana Ines le la
Cruz, Mary Ingles, and Harriet Jacobs. In its breadth and its scope,
this is a fascinating story peopled by remarkable women.