Constructing Citizenship

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A01=Mary A. Evins
A01=Minoa Uffelman
African American women reparations
archival women's history
Author_Mary A. Evins
Author_Minoa Uffelman
Category=JBSF1
Category=JPVC
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
early 20th-century Tennessee
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminist leadership
feminist studies Tennessee
forthcoming
higher education and women
patriotic outreach
Progressive Era reformers
Progressive Era Tennessee
public health activism
rural suffrage activism
southern women history
suffrage movement Tennessee
Tennessee public women
Tennessee suffragists
Tennessee women activists
Tennessee women educators
Tennessee women history
Tennessee women leadership
Tennessee women's associations
US women's history
women in medicine
women in social change
women in the Progressive Era
women's civic engagement
women's club movement
women's history anthology
women's philanthropy Tennessee
women's relief corps

Product details

  • ISBN 9781621907800
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: University of Tennessee Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Amid the rapid industrialization and urbanization of the early twentieth century, Progressive Era activists across the United States fought for social, political, and economic change. Tennessee women were no exception. In Constructing Citizenship: Tennessee Public Women in the Progressive Era, Mary A. Evins and Minoa D. Uffelman present a collection of essays that explore the contributions and civic engagement of women in Tennessee during this transformative period.

Building upon their first volume, Tennessee Women in the Progressive Era, the contributors examine a variety of themes, organizationally structured in four parts: education, associations, service, and suffrage. Across seventeen chapters, the collection covers women's roles in higher education, medicine, and public health; the women's relief corps and patriotic outreach in Tennessee; the women's club movement on the road to suffrage; the power of feminist leadership; women of color leading the national fight for African American reparations and benevolence; philanthropy and community care; rural Tennessee women's support of suffrage; and more.

Drawing on a wealth of archival materials, including personal letters, newspaper editorials, and meeting minutes, each contributor foregrounds long-overlooked stories about Tennessee women's public work during the first half of the twentieth century. Covering a period largely missing from the history of Tennessee women, this anthology fills a critical gap in scholarship. Women's history scholars, Tennessee history specialists, and students of US history more broadly will all find it to be a valuable resource both for self-study and the classroom.

Mary A. Evins, research professor of history at Middle Tennessee State University, is the editor of Tennessee Women in the Progressive Era: Toward the Public Sphere in the New South.

Minoa D. Uffelman, professor emerita of history at Austin Peay State University, is the coeditor of three Clarksville women’s Civil War diaries, including The Civil War Letters of Sarah Kennedy.

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