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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Peggy Pascoe (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, University of Utah)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.441kg ISBN: 9780195084306ISBN 10: 0195084306 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 04 March 1993 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsPascoe's brilliant analysis of Protestant women's home mission organizations is indispensable reading for any historian of late nineteenth- or early twentieth-century America. Organized and written with verve and clarity. --American Historical Review Has a good chance of becoming one of the benchmark studies in women's history. It brings together issues of race and class, gender and region, and then relates them to ideology. --Women's Review of Books A highly sophisticated analysis....Pascoe not only fills a gap in the historical literature on female voluntary associations, but also accomplishes much more. --Western Historical Quarterly The best study yet of women's skillful manipulation of Victorian attitudes in the American west....This engrossing book...is graced by clear, precise writing about women's issues unhindered by shrillness and whining. A scholarly joy to read. --Choice Her chief concern, the history of women in the West, represents some of the bolder and more intensely revisionist themes of the new historians....One of her underlying themes is that the inclusion of women does not merely enrich the overall picture; it changes it dramatically....'Exclude women from Western history, and unreality sets in. Restore them, and the Western drama gains a fully human cast of characters--males and females whose urges, needs, failings, and conflicts we can recognize and even share.' --The New York Times Magazine Pascoe's closely argued...analysis...of 'woman's work for woman' in the West is as timely as it is provocative. --The Nation An original and important work....Provides a masterful analysis of feminist ideology, intercultural relations among women, and the dynamics of social control. --Annals of Iowa Pascoe's brilliant analysis of Protestant women's home mission organizations is indispensable reading for any historian of late nineteenth- or early twentieth-century America. Organized and written with verve and clarity. --American Historical Review<br> Has a good chance of becoming one of the benchmark studies in women's history. It brings together issues of race and class, gender and region, and then relates them to ideology. --Women's Review of Books<br> A highly sophisticated analysis....Pascoe not only fills a gap in the historical literature on female voluntary associations, but also accomplishes much more. --Western Historical Quarterly<br> The best study yet of women's skillful manipulation of Victorian attitudes in the American west....This engrossing book...is graced by clear, precise writing about women's issues unhindered by shrillness and whining. A scholarly joy to read. --Choice<br> Her chief concern, the history of women in the West, represents some of the bolder and more intensely revisionist themes of the new historians....One of her underlying themes is that the inclusion of women does not merely enrich the overall picture; it changes it dramatically....'Exclude women from Western history, and unreality sets in. Restore them, and the Western drama gains a fully human cast of characters--males and females whose urges, needs, failings, and conflicts we can recognize and even share.' --The New York Times Magazine<br> Pascoe's closely argued...analysis...of 'woman's work for woman' in the West is as timely as it is provocative. --The Nation<br> An original and important work....Provides a masterful analysis of feminist ideology, intercultural relations amongwomen, and the dynamics of social control. --Annals of Iowa<br> Pascoe's brilliant analysis of Protestant women's home mission organizations is indispensable reading for any historian of late nineteenth- or early twentieth-century America. Organized and written with verve and clarity. -American Historical Review Has a good chance of becoming one of the benchmark studies in women's history. It brings together issues of race and class, gender and region, and then relates them to ideology. -Women's Review of Books A highly sophisticated analysis...Pascoe not only fills a gap in the historical literature on female voluntary associations, but also accomplishes much more. -Western Historical Quarterly The best study yet of women's skillful manipulation of Victorian attitudes in the American west...This engrossing book...is graced by clear, precise writing about women's issues unhindered by shrillness and whining. A scholarly joy to read. -Choice Her chief concern, the history of women in the West, represents some of the bolder and more intensely revisionist themes of the new historians...One of her underlying themes is that the inclusion of women does not merely enrich the overall picture; it changes it dramatically...'Exclude women from Western history, and unreality sets in. Restore them, and the Western drama gains a fully human cast of characters-males and females whose urges, needs, failings, and conflicts we can recognize and even share.' -The New York Times Magazine Pascoe's closely argued...analysis...of 'woman's work for woman' in the West is as timely as it is provocative. -The Nation An original and important work...Provides a masterful analysis of feminist ideology, intercultural relations among women, and the dynamics of social control. -Annals of Iowa Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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