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OverviewIn Britain in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, universities were one of many institutional state structures wherein gender difference, the male breadwinner ideal, and heterosexuality were central to a conception of citizenship. But while the state could enforce these norms through the parameters it set on the extension franchise or the distribution of welfare benefits, individual women and men also played active roles in creating and renegotiating them through the messy interactions of everyday life. Teaching Gender immerses the reader in lecture theatres, University Senate meetings, student unions, nightclubs, and halls of residence to show how individuals' efforts to find workable paradigms for relating to one another across gender lines took shape within specific institutional, political, and financial constraints, and in the context of a historical moment when anxiety accrued around non-normative genders and sexualities as symptomatic of wider social and political instability. Drawing on extensive research in the archives of ten colleges and universities across England and Scotland, Samuel Rutherford shows that the nationalization and centralization of higher education at the turn of the twentieth century resulted incidentally in coeducation, over the protest of feminist activists who supported gender segregation; that students' negotiation of cross-gender interaction in coeducational universities ultimately led them to identify heterosexuality as a seemingly less fraught paradigm than more gender-neutral conceptions of 'corporate life'; and that single-sex men's and women's colleges, though increasingly marginal, became important sites for the theorization of life paths and identities outside the heterosexual norm. Through detailed recovery both of political and financial decision-making and of the experiences and emotions of faculty, students, administrators, donors, and national politicians, Rutherford paints a vivid and resonant picture of the university campus as a key site for the transmission of norms around gender and sexuality. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Samuel Rutherford (Lecturer in LGBTQ+ History / History of Sexuality, Lecturer in LGBTQ+ History / History of Sexuality, University of Glasgow) , Samuel Rutherford (Lecturer in LGBTQ+ History / History of Sexuality, Lecturer in LGBTQ+ History / History of Sexuality, University of Glasgow)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.598kg ISBN: 9780198937494ISBN 10: 0198937490 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 17 April 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback 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 ContentsIntroduction Making The Coeducational University 1: Inventing Higher Education for Women 2: Efficiency, Centralization, and Integration Gendering The Student 3: 'Corporate Life' 4: Student Masculinities in Public 5: Staging Heterosexuality LOST CAUSES 6: The Single Woman 7: The Higher SodomyReviewsAuthor InformationSamuel Rutherford is Lecturer in LGBTQ+ History / History of Sexuality at the University of Glasgow. He received his PhD in History from Columbia University in 2020. In 2020-24, he was a Junior Research Fellow at first Merton College and then Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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