Description

Book Synopsis
An engaging history of the Ladies Benevolent Society and Hamilton Orphan Asylum and a broad consideration of the ability of women’s charitable work to bridge the nineteenth-century boundaries of public and private spheres.

Trade Review
A very readable, persuasive, and important contribution to the literature on gender and social policy in nineteenth-century Canada written in a way that engagingly connects history with theory. -- James E. Struthers, professor in the Canadian Studies Department at Trent University
...Nielson’s well-crafted study provides a unique lens through which to examine gender, the public-private spheres, and politics in nineteenth-century Canada. -- Claire L. Halstead, University of Western Ontario * British Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 29 No. 1, Spring 2016 *

Table of Contents

Introduction: Gender and the Public Sphere

1 Hamilton, Upper Canada, to 1846

2 A “sufficiently extensive and efficient instrumentality”

3 A Mixed Social Economy

4 The City and the Ladies

5 Public Acts and Private Lives

6 Institutionalization, Adoption, and Apprenticeship

7 Continuity and Change, 1870-93

Conclusion: A Career in Christian Charity

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Private Women and the Public Good Charity and

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    A Hardback by Carmen J. Nielson

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      View other formats and editions of Private Women and the Public Good Charity and by Carmen J. Nielson

      Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
      Publication Date: 16/05/2014
      ISBN13: 9780774826914, 978-0774826914
      ISBN10: 0774826916

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An engaging history of the Ladies Benevolent Society and Hamilton Orphan Asylum and a broad consideration of the ability of women’s charitable work to bridge the nineteenth-century boundaries of public and private spheres.

      Trade Review
      A very readable, persuasive, and important contribution to the literature on gender and social policy in nineteenth-century Canada written in a way that engagingly connects history with theory. -- James E. Struthers, professor in the Canadian Studies Department at Trent University
      ...Nielson’s well-crafted study provides a unique lens through which to examine gender, the public-private spheres, and politics in nineteenth-century Canada. -- Claire L. Halstead, University of Western Ontario * British Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 29 No. 1, Spring 2016 *

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: Gender and the Public Sphere

      1 Hamilton, Upper Canada, to 1846

      2 A “sufficiently extensive and efficient instrumentality”

      3 A Mixed Social Economy

      4 The City and the Ladies

      5 Public Acts and Private Lives

      6 Institutionalization, Adoption, and Apprenticeship

      7 Continuity and Change, 1870-93

      Conclusion: A Career in Christian Charity

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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