A "little world for us": The Heterodoxy Club and the Intellectual Roots of American Feminism, 1912 - 1940

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Authors

Visser, Carlie Devin

Date

2025-04-01

Type

thesis

Language

eng

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Feminism , Intellectual History , Women's History , American History , Psychoanalysis , Heterodoxy Club

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Abstract

This dissertation examines the Heterodoxy Club (1912- 1940) as a critical yet understudied intellectual community that shaped modern American feminism. Formed in Greenwich Village by Marie Jenney Howe, the Heterodoxy Club was not a formal political organization but a space where feminist thought intersected with the broader ideological currents of the Progressive Era. The club’s members – women activists, writers, academics, and reformers – engaged in wide-ranging debated on suffrage, economic independence, psychoanalysis, and personal autonomy, contributing to the intellectual foundations of 20th century feminism. Drawing on the methodologies of feminist intellectual history and feminist theory, this dissertation reconstructs Heterodoxy’s influence through the writings, correspondence, and autobiographical reflections of its members. Women like Crystal Eastman, Beatrice Hinkle, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and Freda Kirchwey articulated a feminism that linked personal experience with collective liberation, challenging both legal and cultural constraints on women. This dissertation foregrounds Heterodoxy’s engagement with psychoanalysis, particularly through the understudied work of Beatrice M. Hinkle and her feminist reinterpretations of psychoanalytic theory, which critiques the cultural conditioning of gender norms. Furthermore, it examines the role of life-writing and autobiographical essays – such as those published in The Nation under Kirchwey’s editorial leadership in 1926 and 1927 – as vehicles for constructing alternative historical memory and feminist consciousness. This study situates the Heterodoxy Club within broader historiographical debates on the intellectual roots of American feminism, expanding upon the work of Nancy F. Cott, Lisa Tetrault, and Judith Schwarz. It argues that Heterodoxy’s feminism, shaped by psychoanalysis, and radical politics, challenged traditional gender ideologies and formed a school of feminist thought that prefigured later 20th century movements. As an overarching framework, this dissertation contends that the club’s emphasis on friendship as a site of intellectual and political solidarity offers an alternative model for understanding feminist organizing beyond conventional movement histories.

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