Jane Addams is best known as the founder of Hull-House, one of
this country's first settlement houses, in the immigrant heart of
late Victorian Chicago. This biography chronicles her privileged
childhood in rural Illinois, her thirst for a first-class
education, and her search for purpose and self-fulfillment,
although constrained by notions of the proper role for females. It
chronicles Addams' tireless work to better the lives of urban
immigrants and her growing national and international role in
social reform. The narrative of her family travails, deep
friendships, reading, writing, travels, beliefs, and accolades and
changing public perception of her causes is consummately woven with
historical context of her times--from the Civil War Era to the
Great Depression.
The range of Addams' concerns, of her active social and
political involvement, is astonishing. She belonged to and helped
to found many organizations, including the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People. She championed women's suffrage
and equality and believed in their moral strength in reform. At one
point, she was cast in the role of middle class secular saint, and
she became the most honored woman in the United States. As the
United States entered World War I and later, Addams was called a
dangerous radical and unchristian scoundrel and vilified for her
outspoken pacifism and championing of free speech, human rights,
and other progressive causes and groups. Her profound contributions
to society began to be recognized again in the 1960s, and this
biography reveals her greatness to a new generation.
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