Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"This book is well-written and thoroughly researched. . . . The extensiveness of the documentation contributes to the appropriateness to the subject matter." --Journal of African American History
"Case has beautifully written a strong argument about the central purpose of these schools and how they compare, with emphasis on both similarities and differences. . . . Case has a strong sense of changes over time, even as she documents continuity."--Joan Marie Johnson, author of Southern Women at the Seven Sister Colleges: Feminist Values and Social Activism, 1875 -1925

"The 125-page work, complemented by fifteen rare archival photos, is filled with insightful commentary on gender, class, and race in secondary education in Georgia around the turn of the twentieth century."--Atlanta Studies
"This work is a worthwhile addition to any undergraduate classroom and graduate seminar on the history of race, gender, and education in the New South."--H-Net
"Leaders of Their Race is a jewel. Case has produced an interesting, well-written, and thoroughly researched study. . . . This is also an important contribution to the study of women's history, African American history, the history of education, and New South history." --American Historical Review
"Sarah Case provides a compelling examination of how these two women's schools, though founded on different visions and skewed by race and class, were remarkably similar in the values they espoused. Grooming their students to be well-educated, modest and respectable, they hoped to prepare their young graduates to contribute to a new society in the South and epitomize the highest womanly virtues." --Southeastern Librarian
"This book is a must-read for anyone interested in the history of US education and it should be a required text for courses in the history of education, African American education, women's education, African American studies, and gender studies, among others." --History of Education Quarterly

Leaders of Their Race

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£19.79

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RRP £21.99 – you save £2.20 (10%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by Sarah H. Case

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Leaders of Their Race by Sarah H. Case

    Publisher: University of Illinois Press
    Publication Date: 30/08/2017
    ISBN13: 9780252082795, 978-0252082795
    ISBN10: 0252082796

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    "This book is well-written and thoroughly researched. . . . The extensiveness of the documentation contributes to the appropriateness to the subject matter." --Journal of African American History
    "Case has beautifully written a strong argument about the central purpose of these schools and how they compare, with emphasis on both similarities and differences. . . . Case has a strong sense of changes over time, even as she documents continuity."--Joan Marie Johnson, author of Southern Women at the Seven Sister Colleges: Feminist Values and Social Activism, 1875 -1925

    "The 125-page work, complemented by fifteen rare archival photos, is filled with insightful commentary on gender, class, and race in secondary education in Georgia around the turn of the twentieth century."--Atlanta Studies
    "This work is a worthwhile addition to any undergraduate classroom and graduate seminar on the history of race, gender, and education in the New South."--H-Net
    "Leaders of Their Race is a jewel. Case has produced an interesting, well-written, and thoroughly researched study. . . . This is also an important contribution to the study of women's history, African American history, the history of education, and New South history." --American Historical Review
    "Sarah Case provides a compelling examination of how these two women's schools, though founded on different visions and skewed by race and class, were remarkably similar in the values they espoused. Grooming their students to be well-educated, modest and respectable, they hoped to prepare their young graduates to contribute to a new society in the South and epitomize the highest womanly virtues." --Southeastern Librarian
    "This book is a must-read for anyone interested in the history of US education and it should be a required text for courses in the history of education, African American education, women's education, African American studies, and gender studies, among others." --History of Education Quarterly

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