White Woman's Burden

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19th-century American women activists
A01=Kathryn Wichelns
and education
Author_Kathryn Wichelns
Category=DS
Category=DSBF
Category=DSBH
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSL
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_society-politics
higher education for women
History of American feminism
history of women's rights
literature
US suffrage movement
women's political involvement
women's role in science
women's suffrage
women's voting patterns

Product details

  • ISBN 9798855808001
  • Weight: 499g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: State University of New York Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Counters universalist narratives of mainstream feminism by examining the power exerted by four white women writer-activists to shape American society from the 1860s to 1930s.

White Woman's Burden focuses on four American writer-activists who were significant if secondary actors in the historical push for two rights that disproportionately served elite women: suffrage and equal higher education. Reflecting regional ideas about whiteness and womanhood from Massachusetts to New Mexico, Elizabeth Agassiz, Annie Fields, Annie Nathan Meyer, and Nina Otero-Warren embodied and helped nationalize the domestically defined versions of their era's mainstream feminism. Through their participation in advances in science, literary culture, higher education, state government, and language rights, these four women advocated for the interrelated objectives of (white) women's rights, US imperialism, and white nationalism. In challenging the assumption that white women's political involvement supported and supports universal goals that serve other marginalized groups, White Woman's Burden revisits mainstream feminist responses to the nineteenth-century "theory of influence," arguing that elite women's practices of social power developed during that period continue to shape our ideas about womanhood and activism into the present—from the contemporary belief in (white) women's innate civic-mindedness to white women's voting patterns in recent US presidential elections.

Kathryn Wichelns is Associate Professor of English at the University of New Mexico. She is the author of Henry James's Feminist Afterlives: Annie Fields, Emily Dickinson, Marguerite Duras.

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