Friday, January 31, 2025

Spotlight of Unruly Human Hearts by Barbara Southard

 

PHOTO SOURCE:
TYPORAMA
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UNRULY HUMAN HEARTS
BARBARA SOUTHARD
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF SIMONE JUNG | PUBLICIST | BOOKS FORWARD.

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Fresh take on real-life love triangle gives voice to ‘notorious’ adulteress of the 19th century.


Southard gives female-centric perspective on Beecher-Tilton adultery trial.


Lust, infidelity, and betrayal centered the historically famous Beecher-Tilton adultery trial where Theodore Tilton, his wife Elizabeth Tilton, and Reverend Henry Ward Beecher are exposed for their extramarital affairs, embodying the new 19th century concept of “free love.”


In her historical fiction debut, “Unruly Human Hearts” debut author Barbara Southard brings life to the one voice unheard throughout the infamous case–the adulteress herself.

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January 28, 2025
She Writes Press
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PRAISE FOR UNRULY HUMAN HEARTS:

“In Unruly Human Hearts, Barbara Southard has created a delightful and poignant novel about the Beecher-Tilton scandal in the Reconstruction Era. Focusing on Elizabeth’s internal struggle to cope with her husband’s public support for women’s rights while maintaining the double standard in private, this story will inspire readers to ask themselves how women should confront similar challenges today. Perfect for fans of well-researched and engaging historical fiction!” Jacqueline Friedland, author of The Stockwell Letters and Trouble the Water


“This is not just the story of a woman who tried to be a good Christian wife while passionately in love with her pastor, it’s a revelation of her anguish as she struggled to protect herself, her children, and the two men she loved from the toll of escalating public scandal.” – Linda Ulleseit, author of The River Remembers and Innocents at Home

“Imposition of impossible goals, insensitive statements, lies, taking your children away, shame, physical threats, gaslighting—women undergo similar incidents of violence no matter the times and circumstances. Elizabeth Tilton is a mirror to our own experiences. Unruly Human Hearts speaks to our world with loudspeakers, leaving us with a sense of impotence, rage, and hope. It sheds light on suffragist women in the US and women who fight for their rights everywhere.” — Yolanda Rivera Castillo, author of Emergencia de la luz and Baladas de tentación y destierro 


“In Unruly Human Hearts, Barbara Southard masterfully unravels the poignant story of Elizabeth Tilton, ensnared in a scandalous love triangle of the 1870s. Rich with period detail and emotional depth, Southard’s flawless reimagining brings to life a time when a woman’s desires and concerns were considered a fault. Elizabeth's journey of resilience and self-discovery amidst societal constraints is both heart-wrenching and inspiring. As she bears the weight of public scrutiny, she delivers a timely message on the restorative power of honesty. With an eye for historical accuracy and a gift for heartfelt storytelling, Barbara illuminates the struggle of a courageous woman ahead of her time, whose fight for dignity and understanding serves as a stark reminder that the quest for gender equality and freedom remains as an ongoing challenge.” – Elba Iris Pérez, author of The Things We Didn’t Know


“A strong woman with a penchant for forgiveness navigates the tumult of her complicated relationships in the historical novel Unruly Human Hearts… The strength of Elizabeth’s character is at the novel’s core. There are moments of eroticism in which she exercises power and agency, refuting her husband’s claims that she was stupid and naive to fall for Henry’s seduction. Elizabeth is also the only one of the three to take responsibility for her actions… She also reminds herself of the good within Henry and Theo, who are both willing to sacrifice Elizabeth to save their own reputations. Her penchant for forgiveness and understanding is conveyed as not a weakness but a strength… The riveting novel Unruly Human Hearts is sensitive in following a strong woman as she overcomes adversity.” – Foreword Clarion Reviews

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ABOUT UNRULY HUMAN HEARTS:

During the Reconstruction era, the Beecher-Tilton adultery trial made headlines and shocked the nation.


Elizabeth Tilton, the woman at the center of it all, is often portrayed as a passive victim of the scandal, but Barbara Southard proposes a different story–one where Elizabeth is the author of her own life.


Using her skills as a historian, Barbara Southard’s emotional novel explores the impact that sexual revolutions have had on women, the challenge of upholding personal convictions in private life, and the power of finding your voice in a world that wants you to be silent.


Elizabeth Tilton, Theodore Tilton, and Reverend Henry Ward Beecher were 19th-century reformers who embraced liberal ideas, including "free love."


When Theodore confessed to an extramarital affair, Elizabeth expressed her feelings for Beecher, entangling them in a complicated love triangle marked by desire, jealousy, and the fear of public scandal.


As Elizabeth's passion for Beecher tested the moral boundaries of her time, she faced difficult choices that could cost her everything.


In a society ready to condemn the slightest deviation from the strict code governing female behavior, she struggled to find her voice and define her own truth.


More about the book: Elizabeth Tilton, a devout housewife, shares liberal ideals with her husband, Theodore Tilton, and their pastor and close friend Reverend Henry Ward Beecher, both influential reformers of the Reconstruction Era who promote suffrage for women and former slaves and advocate for the spiritual power of love rather than Calvinistic retribution.


Elizabeth is torn between admiration for her husband’s stand on women’s rights and resentment of his dominating ways at home. When Theodore justifies his extramarital affairs in terms of the free love doctrine that marriage should not restrict other genuine loves, she becomes closer to Henry, who admires her spiritual gifts—and eventually falls passionately in love with him.


Once passion for her pastor undermines the moral certainties of her generation, Elizabeth enters into uncharted emotional and ethical territory.


Under what circumstances should she tell the truth? If she does, will she lose her children and her marriage?


Will she destroy her own reputation and the career of the reverend who has done much good?


Can a woman accustomed to following the leadership of men find her own path?

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Barbara grew up in New York City, holds a PhD in history from the University of Hawaii, and has served as a professor of history, Chairperson of the History Department, and Associate Dean of Graduate Studies at the Río Piedras Campus of the University of Puerto Rico.


She is the author of a book on Indian history, The Women’s Movement and Colonial Politics in Bengal, 1921–1936, and has also published numerous articles in history journals.  Barbara has also published short stories in literary journals, and she is the author of The Pinch of the Crab, a collection of ten stories set in Puerto Rico, exploring social conflicts of island life, mostly from the female perspective.


Barbara has also been active in raising funds for the Shonali Choudhury Fund of the Community Foundation of Puerto Rico, helping local community organizations working to protect women from domestic violence.


She does this work in honor of her daughter, a public health professor who died of a brain tumor.


You can find more information about Barbara on her website: https://www.barbarasouthard.com/.

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An Interview with

Barbara Southard


1. How did your experiences with the women’s liberation movement in the 1960’s and 1970’s shape your interest in Elizabeth Tilton?

I was a schoolgirl when the conservative culture of the 1950s promoted the ideal of women as homebodies whose sole mission in life was to be a wife and mother. 

The women’s liberation movement and the sexual revolution of the 1960s and 1970s profoundly affected my journey to adulthood. 

In my consciousness-raising group, we talked of equal rights and equal opportunities for women and our need to seek personal fulfillment. 

We applauded the efforts to dismantle the double standard that judged women who took part in premarital or extramarital sex more harshly than men, but we were skeptical that open marriage could work in a sexist society.

Reading about the role of free love (the nineteenth century version of open marriage) in Elizabeth Tilton’s life propelled me to investigate the challenges she faced in an epoch even more profoundly sexist.

2. How did the views expressed by students in a graduate seminar you taught on the social history of the United States influence your decision to explore the Beecher-Tilton scandal more deeply?

I remember telling my students in a graduate course on US social history at the University of Puerto Rico that the Beecher-Tilton trial caused as much sensation in 1875 as the impeachment of President Bill Clinton in 1998 for alleged breaches of the law connected with the attempted cover-up of sexual intimacies with Monica Lewinsky.

A student remarked that there seemed to be more affection between Elizabeth and Henry than Monica and Bill. I agreed with her evaluation but pointed out that neither of the two women wished to accuse their alleged seducers.

Ambitious rivals pushed the cases forward, hoping to gain from the embarrassment of the president and the reverend, but the two men survived the challenges.

“But what happened to Elizabeth?” another student wanted to know.  These discussions with students inspired me to delve more deeply into historical sources in the hope of illuminating Elizabeth’s motivations and the unique challenges that she faced as a woman involved in the greatest sex scandal of the epoch. 

3. Why did you choose to write the novel from Elizabeth Tilton’s perspective, as opposed to that of her two lovers?


Elizabeth’s feelings and motivations were a greater mystery than those of her two lovers.

Her husband, Theodore Tilton, a prominent journalist, and the famous preacher Henry Ward Beecher both testified at the trial. Elizabeth, the only member of this triangle who lacked a public platform, seemed to be very conventional, a deeply religious woman who took her domestic role as wife and mother very seriously, and yet she was accused of holding beliefs and engaging in conduct that challenged the core values of Victorian society.

How did she come to believe in free love?

Once the scandal broke, how did she cope with the danger of losing everything, her reputation, her marriage, her children?

4.  How do the characters in your novel reconcile both their support of free love and their religious beliefs? 

Henry Ward Beecher’s father, who was also a preacher, emphasized Calvinist beliefs about predestination. From early childhood Henry was instilled with the fear of not being chosen by the Almighty to be saved, and he worried constantly whether some small misconduct, like telling a lie, was an indication of being destined for hell.


Henry preached the gospel of love, and Elizabeth was particularly drawn to his preachings about how to become closer to God through love and dedication to other human beings.


If love for our fellow beings is the foundation of ethics, then true love cannot be immoral.


Theodore, who believed in the more abstract concept of God as Truth, insisted that marriage is corrupted by lies and concealment if husband and wife are not able to express true feelings for others.


5.  Tell us more about your career as a historian and your work to highlight women’s struggles in both the United States and India.


During my teaching career at the University of Puerto Rico, I created graduate seminars on women’s history in India and the United States.


In the first chapter of my book about the emergence of the women’s movement in India, I explored the religious and social reform movements that were a prelude to the demand for women’s rights.

When teaching courses about women in the United States, I noted that challenges to Calvinist beliefs were connected to movements to improve the position of women.


My first attempt to come to grips with the fascinating story of Elizabeth, Theodore, and Henry was the preparation of a brief historical study about the impact of the gospel of love on the position of women in the Reconstruction era, as seen in the case of Elizabeth.


I later decided that the conflicting emotions experienced by the three participants in the love triangle, as well as the shifting ground of multiple power struggles, would be better served in a novel


6.  Do you feel that the issues posed in “Unruly Human Hearts” are still relevant today, especially in conversation with the modern concept of polyamory?


Elizabeth’s story is still relevant to issues of individual freedom and social ethics as well as the position of women today. The sexual revolution in the 1960s and 1970s raised questions about whether free love (or open marriage) is liberating for women.

It’s difficult for women who are economically dependent on men to insist that men grant their partners the sexual freedom they claim for themselves.

Although women have made progress toward economic independence, a gap remains.

Hopefully, future progress toward gender equality will make it less likely that women who practice polyamory will undergo the heartbreak Elizabeth experienced.

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