Connecting women : national and international networks during the long nineteenth century / edited by Barton C. Hacker, Joanne Paisana, Margarida Esteves Pereira, Jaime Costa, and Margaret Vining.

Date:
2021
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About this work

Also known as

National and international networks during the long nineteenth century

Description

"Women's networks proliferated during the long nineteenth century in the Atlantic World and began spreading globally. Abetted by transformative changes in communication and transportation (the subject of the first chapter), women established links among themselves, sometimes informally, sometimes as part of formal organizations. Most goal-oriented networks, particularly those with social and political agendas, were personal, national or transnational in nature and inevitably excluded those who did not share the goal. Such activist networks and their influences are the main focus of Part One. Topics addressed include women's national and international networks in British temperance associations; British anti-slavery societies; Italian crime syndicates; the Istanbul region of the Ottoman Empire; Philippine suffragism, early twentieth-century Portuguese political organizations, and Great War relief efforts in France. The chapters in Part Two examine the diverse literary networks that women writers enjoyed, abided, or disdained during the long nineteenth century. Included are the themes of British female utopia and dystopia; how the work of some British women poets both affected and reflected the variety of networks in which they were enmeshed; the intensely personal networks of American writers Mary Moody Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Emily Dickinson, and Alice James; Salem witches reimagined as Romantic heroines by American novelists Caroline Rosina Derby and Ella Taylor; the efforts of Southern autobiographers Rebecca Harding Davis and Elizabeth Avery Meriwether early in the twentieth century to negotiate a place for themselves and the South in American national history; and the significance of women's networks present in the South and absent in Brazil as depicted in Evelyn Scott's 1923 memoir"-- Provided by publisher.

Publication/Creation

Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Scholarly Press, 2021.

Physical description

vi, 269 pages ; 26 cm.

Contents

Part One. Activist networks. Bridging the ocean: technological change and women's transatlantic activism / Barton C. Hacker and Margaret Vining -- Female friendly societies in nineteenth-century Britain / Joanne Paisana -- Interracial networks of transatlantic activism: Sarah Parker Remond reassessing Black womanhood / Sirpa Salenius -- Women in Italian and Italian American organized crime networks in the long nineteenth century / Laura-Isabelle Heitz -- In her image: the manileña suffragist and her story in early twentieth-century periodicals / Katherine G. Lacson -- Part Two. Literary networks. A common cause and parallel networks: Edith Wharton, Gertrude Stein, and Amy Lowell in World War I / Alice Bailey Cheylan -- Wayward girls and wonder women: utopian dreams and dystopian nightmares / Elizabeth Russel -- Poetry as inclusion and exclusion: the dynamics of Victorian women poets' social, political, and artistic networks / Paula Alexandra Guimarães -- The Salem witches (re)created as nineteenth-century romantic heroines / Inês Tadeu F.G. -- Choosing to be artists: women's networks in Evelyn Scott's Escapade / Khristeena Lute -- Transatlantic cultural autobiographies: the relational selves of Mary Russell Mitford and Rebecca Harding Davis / Julia Nitz.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    ZBD.W
    Open shelves

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Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9781944466442
  • 1944466444