180 Quotes by Jill Lepore

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    Wonder Woman isn’t only an Amazonian princess with badass boots. She’s the missing link in a chain of events that begins with the woman suffrage campaigns of the 1910s and ends with the troubled place of feminism fully a century later. Feminism made Wonder Woman. And then Wonder Woman remade feminism...

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    The virtue she valued most was faith. It had no place on Franklin’s list. She placed her trust in Providence. He placed his faith in man.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    Old reference books are like tree rings. Without them, there’d be no way to know what a tree had lived through.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    In 1934, after Upton Sinclair was defeated in his campaign to become the next governor of California, he labeled the advertising concern that defeated him a “lie factory.” Marston took much the same view. One of Wonder Woman’s most sinister adversaries, the Duke of Deception, runs an advertising firm called the Lie Factory.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    Lange, who had been stricken by polio at the age of seven and walked with a painful limp, had become famous for the achingly sympathetic photographs she’d taken for the Farm Security Administration during the Depression. “Cripples know about each other,” she said of her ability to capture suffering on film.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    The most ignorant young man, who knows nothing of the needs of women, thinks himself a competent legislator, because he is a man,” Pankhurst told the crowd, eyeing the Harvard men. “This aristocratic attitude is a mistake.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    All feminists are suffragists, but not all suffragists are feminists,” as one feminist explained.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    The fight for women’s rights hasn’t come in waves. Wonder Woman was a product of the suffragist, feminist, and birth control movements of the 1900s and 1910s and became a source of the women’s liberation and feminist movements of the 1960s and 1970s. The fight for women’s rights has been a river, wending.

  • Share

  • Author Jill Lepore
  • Quote

    Between 1910 and 1920, the percentage of married women who worked had nearly doubled, and the number of married women in the professions had risen by 40 percent, Collier noted. “The question, therefore, is no longer, should women combine marriage with careers, but how?”23.

  • Share