Mary Lyon and the Mount Holyoke Missionaries
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:29th Jan '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
American women played in important part in Protestant foreign missionary work from its early days at the beginning of the nineteenth century, enabling them not only to disseminate religious principles but also to break into public life and create expanded opportunities for themselves and other women. No institution was more closely associated with women missionaries that Mount Holyoke College. This book examines Mount Holyoke founder Mary Lyon and the missionary women trained by her. Porterfield sees Lyon and her students as representative of dominant trends in American missionary thought before the Civil War. She focuses on how their activities in several parts of the world--particularly northwest Persia, Maharashtra in western India, and Natal in southeast Africa--and shows that while their primary goals remained elusive, antebellum missionary women made major contributions to cultural change and the development of new cultures.
...Amanda Porterfield provides a much-needed analysis of the religious ideas that spurred Anglo-American Protestant women into mission work in the early part of the nineteenth century. * The Journal of American History *
ISBN: 9780195113013
Dimensions: 234mm x 160mm x 25mm
Weight: 499g
192 pages