Education for Equality: Women's Rights Periodicals and Women's Higher Education, 1849-1920
By (Author) Patricia Smith Butcher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th November 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Higher education, tertiary education
News media and journalism
376.650973
Hardback
138
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
312g
The history of women's rights has usually been defined in terms of the fight for suffrage. Yet the agenda of women's rights movement in the mid-19th through early 20th centuries embraced a broader of goals. These were reflected in the women's rights periodicals of the era. One of the goals, securing women's rights to higher education, has remained virtually unexamined and, consequently, all but unknown. Aiming to fill that gap, Butcher links two aspects of the women's rights movement: its press and its struggle to secure for women the advantages of higher education. Eleven of the best-known papers, written by women, for women, are analyzed here in a chapter covering the women's rights press, the purpose of women's education, coeducation, women as teachers and the professional and graduate education of women. In offering this analysis, and in exploring the fight for higher education, Butcher hopes to broaden understanding of the history and the legacy of the women's rights movement.
PATRICIA SMITH BUTCHER is Assistant Director of Readers Services at Trenton State College, New Jersey. She is the bibliographic editor of Past and Promise: Lives of New Jersey Women (Scarecrow, 1989). She has contributed articles and reviews to History of Higher Education Annual, Library Journal and RQ among others.