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Acknowledgments Perhaps the best thing—maybe the only good thing—about taking a long time to write a book is the ever-enlarging circle of people who have helped me in one way or another and who, in a sense, formed a community centered around the book. Making new friends and getting to know other scholars in the field have been among the most rewarding aspects of the project. A long genesis also means that I have acquired a long list of debts which a simple ‘‘thank you’’ can hardly repay. In any case, I will try. First of all, I would like to thank the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Society for Eighteenth Century Studies, the American Antiquarian Society (AAS), and George Mason University for providing fellowships or financial support that allowed me to research and write the book. I am especially grateful to Joanne Chaison, John Hench, and Phil Lampi at the AAS, who played key roles in the early stages of the project and have made their institution a delightful haven for scholars of early America. I would also like to thank Dave Kelley of the Library of Congress for reference assistance that went above and beyond the call of duty. Because most of the research for this book was finished before the widespread availability of digital databases and web search engines, I had to rely on more old-fashioned methods. More than ten years ago, Dave showed me an obscure index to the American Periodical Series, printed on microprint cards (if anyone remembers what those are), that opened up whole new avenues of inquiry. Many other individuals aided my research in ways both large and small. I would like to thank the staffs at the Library of Congress Manuscript Room and Rare Book Room, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the New York Historical Society, the Houghton Library at Harvard University , the Maryland Historical Society, the Virginia Historical Society, and the Southern Collection at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, for help in uncovering the riches of their archives. I am grateful to the editors of the William & Mary Quarterly and the American Quarterly for giving me permission to reproduce portions of articles previously published in their journals. I would also like to acknowledge the assis- 232 Acknowledgments tance of my graduate students, Linda Burch, Pat Dunlap, Clayton Jewett, Stephanie Hurter, and Karen McPherson, who made useful contributions to my research. In addition, I thank Terry Ross, who provided timely advice of another sort that helped bring the project to fruition. Many scholars have commented on papers related to this project or read sections of the work that appeared previously in article form. For useful comments and suggestions, I would like to thank Catherine Allgor, Doron Ben-Atar, Tim Breen, Pat Cohen, Seth Cotlar, Nancy Cott, Mary Kelley, Sarah Knott, Jan Lewis, Barbara Oberg, Peter Onuf, Jeff Pasley , Whit Ridgway, Andy Robertson, Barbara Taylor, David Waldstreicher , and Gordon Wood. I am especially grateful to Dan Richter, who read the entire manuscript and provided astute criticism that helped me sharpen and refine my argument. My editor at the University of Pennsylvania Press, Bob Lockhart, has been supportive and enthusiastic for as long as I have been working on the project. He has been the ideal person to shepherd the manuscript into print. Sheila Skemp, Elaine Forman Crane, and Edie Gelles have been my intellectual companions throughout the entire journey. We have done so many conference sessions together that I am sure I don’t know where my ideas end and theirs begin. They have read my papers, articles, and drafts and offered innumerable suggestions for improvement. I thank them for their intellectual generosity, their friendship, and their own significant contributions to the field of early American women’s history. The book has also benefited from discussions with other colleagues. My department at George Mason University has been a most congenial and dynamic place for a historian to work. Jack Censer, Jane Turner Censer , Marion Deshmukh, the late Larry Levine, Mike O’Malley, Roy Rosenzweig, Suzy Smith, and Jeffrey Stewart have all provided help, insight, or encouragement at key moments. I also thank Paula Petrik for her generous assistance in reproducing some of the digital images. Members of my history reading group have kept me abreast of developments in other fields and pushed my thinking about history in new directions. For their collegiality and intellectual stimulation, I thank Jim Gilbert, Mike Kazin, Nelson Lichtenstein, Melani McAlister...

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