Philanthropy and the Construction of Victorian Women's Citizenship: Lady Frederick Cavendish and Miss Emma Cons

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University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2014 - Fiction - 295 pages

British social reformers Emma Cons (1838 1911) and Lucy Cavendish (1841 1924) broke new ground in their efforts to better the lot of the working poor in London: they hoped to transform these people's lives through great art, music, high culture, and elite knowledge. Although they did not recognize it as such, their work was in many ways an affirmation and display of citizenship. This book uses Cons's and Cavendish's partnership and work as an illuminating point of departure for exploring the larger topic of women's philanthropic campaigns in late Victorian and Edwardian society.

Andrea Geddes Poole demonstrates that, beginning in the late 1860s, a shift was occurring from an emphasis on charity as a private, personal act of women's virtuous duty to public philanthropy as evidence of citizenly, civic participation. She shows that, through philanthropic works, women were able to construct a separate public sphere through which they could speak directly to each other about how to affect matters of significant public policy decades before women were finally granted the right to vote.

 

Contents

Introduction
3
1 Lucy Cavendish
16
Womens Philanthropy and the Church of England
59
3 Emma Cons
96
4 Opera for Lambeth
135
5 The Citizens of Morley College
159
6 Philanthropy and Citizenship
199
Conclusion
220
Notes
229
Bibliography
273
Index
289
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About the author (2014)

Andrea Geddes Poole is a historian of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Britain and of philanthropy to the arts. She is also the author of Stewards of the Nation’s Art: Contested Cultural Authority, 1890–1939.

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