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Chapter 3 Women in the World of George W. Taylor The Public and Private Worlds of Orthodox Quaker Women
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Illustrations xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Engaging Conflict and Separations
- Chapter 1 Hicksite Women in the Long Nineteenth Century 17
- Chapter 2 Elizabeth Robson, Transatlantic Women Ministers, and the Hicksite-Orthodox Schism 38
- Chapter 3 Women in the World of George W. Taylor The Public and Private Worlds of Orthodox Quaker Women 57
-
Part 2 Engaging Diversity
- Chapter 4 Vocation, Religious Identity, and the Abolitionist Networks of Sarah Mapps Douglass and Sojourner Truth 79
- Chapter 5 “She Hath Done What She Could” The Charitable Antislavery Work of Eleanor Clark of Street 102
- Chapter 6 Ruth Esther Smith (1870–1947) Foremother to Friends in Central America 122
-
Part 3 Engaging Sacred and Secular Literature
- Chapter 7 An Unforeseen Consequence of the Orthodox-Hicksite Schism (1827–1828) The Fiction Writing of Amelia Opie, Helen Hunt Jackson, Mary Howitt, and Mary Hallock Foote 137
- Chapter 8 A Friendly Daughter: Lucy Barton’s (Ex-) Quaker Identity, Cultural Negotiations, and Authorial Inheritance 156
- Chapter 9 The “Mystic Sense” of Scripture as Taught by Holiness Quaker Hannah Whitall Smith 178
-
Part 4 Engaging the Wider Social and Cultural World
- Chapter 10 “Radicalism Within Boundaries” Excavating the Contribution of Women Quakers to Radical Reform in Britain and Their Transnational Networks in the Nineteenth Century 199
- Chapter 11 “We Must Hope That the Moderates with Their Quiet Attire Are the Rising Section” British Women Friends’ Relinquishment of Plain Dress 222
- Chapter 12 “The Joy of Doing Right” The Humanitarian Work of Doctor Hilda Clark During the First World War 245
- Afterword 265
- Selected Bibliography 269
- Contributors 277
- Index 283
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Illustrations xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Engaging Conflict and Separations
- Chapter 1 Hicksite Women in the Long Nineteenth Century 17
- Chapter 2 Elizabeth Robson, Transatlantic Women Ministers, and the Hicksite-Orthodox Schism 38
- Chapter 3 Women in the World of George W. Taylor The Public and Private Worlds of Orthodox Quaker Women 57
-
Part 2 Engaging Diversity
- Chapter 4 Vocation, Religious Identity, and the Abolitionist Networks of Sarah Mapps Douglass and Sojourner Truth 79
- Chapter 5 “She Hath Done What She Could” The Charitable Antislavery Work of Eleanor Clark of Street 102
- Chapter 6 Ruth Esther Smith (1870–1947) Foremother to Friends in Central America 122
-
Part 3 Engaging Sacred and Secular Literature
- Chapter 7 An Unforeseen Consequence of the Orthodox-Hicksite Schism (1827–1828) The Fiction Writing of Amelia Opie, Helen Hunt Jackson, Mary Howitt, and Mary Hallock Foote 137
- Chapter 8 A Friendly Daughter: Lucy Barton’s (Ex-) Quaker Identity, Cultural Negotiations, and Authorial Inheritance 156
- Chapter 9 The “Mystic Sense” of Scripture as Taught by Holiness Quaker Hannah Whitall Smith 178
-
Part 4 Engaging the Wider Social and Cultural World
- Chapter 10 “Radicalism Within Boundaries” Excavating the Contribution of Women Quakers to Radical Reform in Britain and Their Transnational Networks in the Nineteenth Century 199
- Chapter 11 “We Must Hope That the Moderates with Their Quiet Attire Are the Rising Section” British Women Friends’ Relinquishment of Plain Dress 222
- Chapter 12 “The Joy of Doing Right” The Humanitarian Work of Doctor Hilda Clark During the First World War 245
- Afterword 265
- Selected Bibliography 269
- Contributors 277
- Index 283