Selected Papers of Jane Addams

Regular price €91.99
Title
A01=Jane Addams
author
Author_Jane Addams
biography
Category=DND
Category=JKS
collection
culture
elite
Ellen Gates Starr
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethical development
European travel
evolution
experience
female friendship
gender
history of education
Hull-House
intellectual
medical education
opportunity
papers
philanthropy
religious belief
Rockford Female Seminary
seminary
social activist
social reform
social welfare
transition
U.S. history
upper middle class
women's education
women's studies
writer

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252033490
  • Weight: 1220g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Dec 2009
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Venturing into Usefulness, the second volume of The Selected Papers of Jane Addams, documents the experience of this major American historical figure, intellectual, social activist, and author between June 1881, when at twenty-one she had just graduated from Rockford Female Seminary, and early 1889, when she was on the verge of founding the Hull-House settlement with Ellen Gates Starr. During these years she was developing into the social reformer and advocate of women's rights, socioeconomic justice, and world peace she would eventually become. She evolved from a high-minded but inexperienced graduate of a women's seminary into an educated woman and seasoned traveler well-exposed to elite culture and circles of philanthropy.

Artfully annotated, The Selected Papers of Jane Addams offers an evocative choice of correspondence, photographs, and other primary documents, presenting a multi-layered narrative of Addams's personal and emerging professional life. Themes inaugurated in the previous volume are expanded here, including dilemmas of family relations and gender roles; the history of education; the dynamics of female friendship; religious belief and ethical development; changes in opportunities for women; and the evolution of philanthropy, social welfare, and reform ideas.

Mary Lynn McCree Bryan is the editor of The Jane Addams Papers Project in the department of history at Duke University, editor of the microfilm edition of the Jane Addams Papers, a coeditor of The Jane Addams Papers: A Comprehensive Guide, and a former curator of the Jane Addams Hull-House at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Barbara Bair is the associate editor of The Jane Addams Papers Project, a historian in the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, and the author of Though Justice Sleeps: African Americans, 1880-1900.Maree de Angury has worked on the Jane Addams Papers Project for more than two decades, is a coeditor of The Jane Addams Papers: a Comprehensive Guide, and is an administrative manager at University of North Carolina, Wilmington.