SYLVIA D. HOFFERT, a former professor of history at both UNC Chapel Hill and Texas A&M University, is the author of several books, including When Hens Crow: The Woman’s Rights Movement in Antebellum America; A History of Gender in America; Jane Grey Swisshelm: An Unconventional Life; and Alva Vanderbilt Belmont: Unlikely Champion of Women’s Rights. Hoffert lives and writes in the North Carolina piedmont.
Sylvia D. Hoffert successfully reveals the ways that gossip and idle conversations were anything but idle in a small southern town. Indeed, Wagging Tongues and Tittle Tattle skillfully uncovers the function between reputation, gossip, and action, not just for elite men, but for women, free people of color, and the enslaved. -- David W. Dangerfield * professor of history, University of South Carolina - Salkehatchie * In antebellum Hillsborough, North Carolina, gossip was serious business! Sylvia Hoffert deftly demonstrates how chatter and rumor shaped reputations, relationships, and social order, within and across lines of race and gender. A joy to read, Wagging Tongues combines wide-ranging sources with keen historical insight, unpacking the ways small-town talk regulated credit worthiness, treatment of enslaved people, class relations and more, providing a compelling model for future studies of community dynamics. -- Carol Lasser * Executive Director, Wilson Bruce Evans Home Historical Society and coauthor of Elusive Utopia: The Struggle for Racial Equality in Oberlin, Ohio *