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Book Summary and Reviews of Presence by Erin Maglaque

Presence by Erin Maglaque

Presence

A Hidden History of the Female Body

by Erin Maglaque

  • Readers' Rating (2):
  • Published:
  • Jun 2026, 320 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

A vibrant history of women's bodies, expertise, and work from a major new writer—stylish, revelatory, and liberating.

Today, we understand the mind and the body to be distinct; that the mind exercises control over the flesh. But as Erin Maglaque experienced the transformations of pregnancy, abortion, birth, and care-giving, she began to doubt the truth of that dichotomy. In an effort to better understand her experiences, she found herself reaching to the premodern past, a period when the strange rubbed up against the strikingly recognizable: when people accepted both levitation and the smallpox vaccine, witchcraft and universal gravitation; a time when understandings of the body and its capacity for thought were more expansive, and more unruly.

Structured as a biography of the author's own body, from girlhood and adolescence, to sex and abortion, to feeding and caring for an infant, to her experience caring for someone as they were dying, Erin places her personal history into a deep dialogue with the premodern past. She explores the relation between imagination and gender, between maternal and historical subjectivity; she positions female desire as a practice with a past, and offers gentler and more forgiving understandings of housekeeping, pregnancy, early miscarriage, abortion, birth, sleeplessness, and breastfeeding.

For readers of Amia Srinivasan's The Right to Sex, Cat Bohannon's Eve, and Olivia Laing's Everybody, Presence is a unique experiment in historical thinking and embodied knowledge; a thoroughly researched, vibrant history of women's bodies, expertise, and work from a major new writer.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"An impressive book debut ... As Maglaque examines pregnancy and miscarriage, abortion, labor and birth, caregiving, housework, and care of the dying, the voices of myriad women (herself included) amply fulfill her aim of making the past 'present and immediate.' A richly textured, revelatory history." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Engrossing and vital, Presence rediscovers the female body as a vessel of history. Interweaving past and present, the personal with incisive scholarship, these stories reveal the rich, unexpected, and sometimes brutal ways in which the complexities of female embodiment connect all women across all time." —Michelle Orange, author of Pure Flame

"In Presence, Erin Magalaque expands and explodes the genre of personal history. In a voice at once deeply learned and often disarmingly intimate, these explorations unravel much of what women have been told about our bodies, desires, and capacities. They embody a mode of thought that does not only describe freedom but enacts it." —Moira Weigel, author of Labor of Love

"An immersive, revelatory, and astonishing book about women, told through the distinct bodily experiences that punctuate our lives, and the history we've rarely been taught. Beautifully written and acutely insightful, Presence connects us to ourselves, our foremothers, and each other." —Sophie Gilbert, author of Girl on Girl

This information about Presence was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

Reader Reviews

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Janine_S

Examining the female body in history
I am always attracted to books that look at topics I wouldn’t normally read about so when this ARC popped up, I was immediately intrigued (my thanks to NetGalley and Astra Publishing House). It turned out to be an exceptional read.

The author, in her debut book, is on the faculty at the University of Sheffield, England, and offers a fascinating study of women using her own body “as the template.” Drawing on historical, artistic, midwifery journals, legal, scientific and “household guide” sources, we get a bird’s eye view of women’s experiences and self imagineds between 1500 to 1800. This was a period of “profound change” for women and during which men also took over things like births, normally handled by midwives. Another example , in the 16th C it was thought a woman needed to experience organism to conceive by the 18th C it was argued organism didn’t exist.

The book examines birth, abortion, miscarriage, breast feeding, house work and care for the dying. As on French memoirist, Madame de Roland, wrote in the 18th C, about breastfeeding: “In truth, looking at the matter closely, nursing a baby is a course in morals, and I think some women do well not to try it.” Also before the 18th C, sex was non-penetrative, by the end it was penetrative. We get our sexual proclivities from this century. Loved Chapter 8 entitled “A History of Durdgery.” This chapter actually explores women working on textiles and how to keep white linen clean.

There are wonderful paintings and illustrations in the book showing women in various poses and ways of life. This added nicely to historical tale being offered in this book. Highly recommend.

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Author Information

Erin Maglaque

Erin Maglaque is a writer and historian. She teaches history at Durham University in the UK, and received her PhD from the University of Oxford. Erin writes regularly about history, gender, and feminism for the London Review of Books, The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Book Review, and other publications. Presence is her first book.

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