Description

Book Synopsis
The first comprehensive study of the role of gender in British Protestant missionary expansion into China and India during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This is the first comprehensive study of the role of gender in British Protestant missionary expansion into China and India during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Focusing on the experiences of wives and daughters, female missionaries, educators and medical staff associated with the London Missionary Society, the China Inland Mission and the various Scottish Presbyterian Mission Societies, it compares and contrasts gender relations within different British Protestant missions in cross-cultural settings. Drawing on extensive published and archival materials, this study examines how gender, race, class, nationality and theology shaped the polity of Protestant missions and Christian interaction with native peoples. Rather than providing a romantic portrayal of fulfilled professional freedom, this work argues that women's labor in Christian missions, as in the secular British Empire and domestic society, remained under-valued both in terms of remuneration and administrative advancement, until well into the twentieth century. Rich in details and full of insights, this work not only presents the first comparative treatment of gender relations in British Christian missionary movements, but also contributes to an understanding of the importance of gender more broadly in the high imperial age. RHONDA A. SEMPLE is Assistant Professor ofHistory at the University of Northern British Columbia, Canada.

Trade Review
This carefully researched study makes a unique and valuable context to mission studies. * MISSIOLOGY *
A mine of information about many other issues besides those of the changing roles of women missionaries. * JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY *
Informative for anyone interested in the Victorian age and in women's studies. * ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR ENGLISH STUDIES *
A worthwhile and original contribution. * AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW *
An extensively researched and carefully argued book [that] helps to expand the boundaries of British social history even as it raises some fundamental questions. * VICTORIAN STUDIES *
Copious archival research makes this a valuable addition to scholarship on late-Victorian and Edwardian missionary enterprises. * EHR *

Missionary Women: Gender, Professionalism and the

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    A Hardback by Rhonda Rhonda Semple

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      View other formats and editions of Missionary Women: Gender, Professionalism and the by Rhonda Rhonda Semple

      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 09/10/2003
      ISBN13: 9781843830139, 978-1843830139
      ISBN10: 1843830132

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The first comprehensive study of the role of gender in British Protestant missionary expansion into China and India during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This is the first comprehensive study of the role of gender in British Protestant missionary expansion into China and India during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Focusing on the experiences of wives and daughters, female missionaries, educators and medical staff associated with the London Missionary Society, the China Inland Mission and the various Scottish Presbyterian Mission Societies, it compares and contrasts gender relations within different British Protestant missions in cross-cultural settings. Drawing on extensive published and archival materials, this study examines how gender, race, class, nationality and theology shaped the polity of Protestant missions and Christian interaction with native peoples. Rather than providing a romantic portrayal of fulfilled professional freedom, this work argues that women's labor in Christian missions, as in the secular British Empire and domestic society, remained under-valued both in terms of remuneration and administrative advancement, until well into the twentieth century. Rich in details and full of insights, this work not only presents the first comparative treatment of gender relations in British Christian missionary movements, but also contributes to an understanding of the importance of gender more broadly in the high imperial age. RHONDA A. SEMPLE is Assistant Professor ofHistory at the University of Northern British Columbia, Canada.

      Trade Review
      This carefully researched study makes a unique and valuable context to mission studies. * MISSIOLOGY *
      A mine of information about many other issues besides those of the changing roles of women missionaries. * JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY *
      Informative for anyone interested in the Victorian age and in women's studies. * ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR ENGLISH STUDIES *
      A worthwhile and original contribution. * AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW *
      An extensively researched and carefully argued book [that] helps to expand the boundaries of British social history even as it raises some fundamental questions. * VICTORIAN STUDIES *
      Copious archival research makes this a valuable addition to scholarship on late-Victorian and Edwardian missionary enterprises. * EHR *

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