Social and Moral Reform
In: History of Women in the United States Volume 17/1
Frontmatter --Contents --Series Preface --Introduction --Social and Moral Reform --Beauty, the Beast and the Militant Woman: A Case Study in Sex Roles and Social Stress in Jacksonian America --The Power of Women's Networks: A Case Study of Female Moral Reform in Antebellum America --The Forten-Purvis Women of Philadelphia and the American Anti-Slavery Crusade --Race, Sex, and the Dimensions of Liberty in Antebellum America --The Origins of Temperance Activism and Militancy among American Women --Women, Children, and the Uses of the Streets: Class and Gender Conflict in New York City, 1850-1860 --Women and Temperance in Antebellum America, 1830-1860 --The Yankee Schoolmarm in Freedmen's Schools: An Analysis of Attitudes --Women Who Were More Than Men: Sex and Status in Freedmen's Teaching --Yankee Schoolmarms and the Domestication of the South --The Charitable and the Poor: The Emergence of Domestic Politics in Augusta, Georgia, 1860-1880 --"The Ladies Want to Bring about Reform in the Public Schools": Public Education and Women's Rights in the Post-Civil War South --Temperance, Benevolence, and the City: The Cleveland Non-Partisan Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 1874-1900 --Their Sisters' Keepers: An Historical Perspective on Female Correctional Institutions in the United States: 1870-1900 --The "New Woman" in the New South --Feminism and Temperance Reform in the Boulder WCTU --Cultural Hybrid in the Slums: The College Woman and the Settlement House, 1889-1894 --Female Support Networks and Political Activism: Lillian Wald, Crystal Eastman, Emma Goldman --Domesticating the Nineteenth-Century American City --Women Reformers and American Culture, 1870-1930.