Betsy Golden Kellem is a scholar of the unusual. Her writing on circus and entertainment history has appeared in venues including The Atlantic, Vanity Fair, Washington Post, Public Domain Review, Smithsonian, Atlas Obscura, and Slate. A board member of the Barnum Museum and the Circus Historical Society, Betsy is an Emmy winner for her Showman's Shorts video series on P. T. Barnum. She is a columnist for JSTOR Daily and regularly teaches and speaks for academia and industry. If you ask nicely, she will juggle knives for you. She lives in North Haven, Connecticut.
“Jumping Through Hoops is the definitive history of women in the circus. Betsy Golden Kellem is the perfect guide to this fabulous, forgotten world of snake charmers, strongwomen, wire walkers, magicians, lion trainers, and beauty queens. A joy to read!” —Debby Applegate, author of Madam: The Biography of Polly Adler, Icon of the Jazz Age “This landmark book carves out new possibilities for what words like circus and women could possibly signify. The death-defying act that Jumping Through Hoops performs is reaching back to rewrite our understanding of culture and gender in our own times. A must-read.” —Caroline Hagood, author of Weird Girls “The history of the circus and its community is a powerful lens through which one can learn about shifting cultural values. By giving new recognition to these entertainment celebrities of the nineteenth century, Betsy Golden Kellem has also documented a period of social change in which women increasingly expanded their realms of experience beyond the home, to places as extreme as the top of a tent or the mouth of a cannon!” —Jennifer Lemmer Posey, Tibbals Curator of Circus at the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art