A Womans Work, Elinor Cleghorn
A Womans Work, Elinor Cleghorn
List: $24.00 | Sale: $16.80
Club: $12.00

A Woman's Work
Reclaiming the Radical History of Mothering

Author: Elinor Cleghorn

Narrator: Sarah Slimani

Unabridged: 12 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 03/17/2026

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

From the author of Unwell Women comes a powerful and groundbreaking new narrative history of motherhood and mothering.

Mothers make history. But what it has meant for mothers to do the physical and emotional work of mothering has, for centuries, been neglected in the stories of the past. Patriarchal control of motherhood has relegated the acts of growing, birthing, nurturing, and loving to the sidelines, and deemed it unimportant, women's work. Now, through the voices of women themselves, Elinor Cleghorn reclaims and retells the history of motherhood, showcasing the mothers, othermothers, midwives, activists, community leaders, and more who have shaped the course of history.

Beginning in the ancient world, we encounter a figurine made for a childbirth ritual over three thousand years ago. We meet extraordinary writers and poets, like Anne Bradstreet and Elizabeth Jocelin, who were expressing their innermost feelings about motherhood. During the seventeenth century, in the streets of London, we encounter unmarried mothers struggling against stigma and shame, and the women who strove to help them. Later, pioneers like Mary Wollstonecraft laid the intellectual foundation for the liberation of motherhood from male control, and the abhorrent treatment of enslaved mothers was brought to public attention by courageous activists like Sojourner Truth. These and many other brave characters lobbied for mothers of all classes and circumstances to be valued, respected, and supported--not as reproductive vessels, but as people.

*Includes a downloadable PDF of a bibliography and notes from the book

About The Author

Elinor Cleghorn is a feminist cultural historian, writer, and researcher living in Sussex. After receiving her PhD in humanities and cultural studies in 2012, she worked for three years as a postdoctoral researcher at the Ruskin School of Art at the University of Oxford on an interdisciplinary arts and medical humanities project. Her writing on women's health and its histories has been published in The Wall Street Journal, BBC History, BBC Science Focus, New Scientist, and Vogue, and she has discussed her research on BBC's Woman's Hour, NPR, and numerous podcasts. Elinor is the author of Unwell Women, which has been translated across the world.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jamie on March 06, 2026

i appreciate this book. The history and information about women throughout history educated me. I had to read in small bursts because the information is dense and I needed time to process what I was reading. This is not a fast read. Still worth reading.......more

Goodreads review by C.Z. on February 06, 2026

This is an intellectually rich, deeply researched examination of motherhood as a political, historical, and cultural force rather than a purely private experience. Cleghorn traces a powerful chronology of womanhood and mothering, weaving together medical history, feminist theory, and lived experience......more

Goodreads review by Elaine on February 20, 2026

I requested this book on NetGalley when I saw the subtitle. I knew that the author would most likely be coming from a very different viewpoint than myself, but I was interested to read about the mothering through the centuries. As a historian, the author walks through human history, but centers wome......more

Goodreads review by Sarah Johnson on March 24, 2026

As if I needed more reasons to be annoyed at the patriarchy… ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Really interesting read. Such a fascinating historical look at feminism, motherhood, and the way women’s bodies have been understood over time or misunderstood in many cases. As a midwifery lecturer I found this especially engaging.......more

Goodreads review by candide_in_ohio on March 25, 2026

I was very excited about this book! A few chapters in however I wondered why I was feeling frustrated and I realized that I kept expecting a history of motherhood and instead what I was getting was a history of.., procreation. Once I’d noticed that the research was about everything that had to do wi......more


Quotes

“A perfectly timed and illuminating triumph that consolidates Cleghorn's place among the foremost voices in medical history.”
—Lindsey Fitzharris, New York Times bestselling author of The Facemaker

“An essential history of forgotten lives and labor.”
—Leah Hazard, author of Womb

“Mothers may have a special place in our hearts, but they've been robbed of their rightful place in our history. Valued for their wombs—not their minds or talents—for millennia women's bodies were controlled and their lives circumscribed by man-made political, economic, and religious systems designed to silence them in life and erase them for posterity. Now, with robust research and eloquent rage, Elinor Cleghorn digs deep to retrieve the names and restore the accomplishments of the childbearers, midwives, nurturers, and activists who refused to be merely passive ‘vessels’ of procreation, but the builders of civilization. Cleghorn exposes the origins of the power dynamics of motherhood still at work today, providing a timely lesson on the dangers of allowing outdated patriarchal attitudes to shape modern public policy.

For mom's next gift, skip the hearts and flowers and give a copy of this enlightening, infuriating book.”
—Elaine Weiss, author of Spell Freedom: The Underground Schools that Built the Civil Rights Movement and The Woman's Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote

“Cleghorn takes a sweeping view of motherhood… Impressive research informs a vibrantly detailed history.”
Kirkus (starred review)

“Feminist cultural historian Cleghorn's (Unwell Women, 2021) engaging commentary brings in profiles of historical figures and considerations of period texts, cultural expectations, societal conditions, government campaigns, and social media influences. . . . This call to action offers a thoughtful perspective.”
Booklist

“Beyond being a history of pregnancy, this book is more broadly an analysis of how men have claimed and controlled women’s bodies.”
Library Journal

“A meticulously comprehensive survey that, at its best, casts fascinating light on mothers’ thoughts on mothering.”
Publisher's Weekly