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Historical Portraits of Women Home Scientists - The University of New Zealand, 1911-1947 (Hardcover)
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Historical Portraits of Women Home Scientists - The University of New Zealand, 1911-1947 (Hardcover)
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This book offers an historical portrait of the first generations of
women home scientists at the University of New Zealand in the early
decades of the twentieth century. It adopts the tools of
biographical research to interrogate their professional lives in a
new colonial university. With a specific focus on Home Science,
this book contests contemporary views that a university education
would produce glorified housekeepers. Previous scholarship has not
fully considered how Home Science expanded the range of
professional, academic and career options for educated women.
Drawing extensively on archival material from New Zealand, the
United States, and England, this book examines how women worked
with, around, and against gender stereotypes to establish
themselves as professional scholars in the field of Home Science.
This book is a rich micro-history of gender identities and roles.
It demonstrates how Home Science, intended by male academic
administrators to confine women to their "proper" domestic sphere,
was used by home scientists to create new professional
opportunities for women, both in the academy and in the scientific
community at large. These determined and talented women were not
victims of patriarchy but creative agents of change and promise. As
activist women before them, they worked with, around, and against
gender stereotypes to expand the area of "women's sphere." The
portraits sketched in this book illuminate the extent to which New
Zealand home scientists established connections with women in the
US and England and their contribution to this transnational
community of scholars. The authors go beyond arguments that Home
Science, as a subject and field of study, hindered women to ask
instead how and why it developed as it did. They trace the lives
and careers of early home scientists to understand how these
educated and mobile women transcended gendered views that their
work was little more than "glorified housekeeping." The careers of
academic women were deeply marked by the gendered boundaries of the
Academy as well as the profoundly gendered expectations of their
daily lives. The portraits presented in this book suggest that
academic women were politically astute. That is, they were able to
'read' the context in which they lived and worked and while on the
one hand they appeared to accept their gendered positioning, on the
other, they used these opportunities to neutralize their marginal
status and create a specialized education for women. Successive
generations of graduate women derived benefits from the
professionalization of women's work and were able to consider a
range of career options that provided real alternatives to
domesticity. There can be little doubt that these first generations
of academic women occupied dangerous territory; and it is this
terrain that contemporary women academics inhabit. The history of
women's higher education continues to be deeply marked by enduring
struggles for recognition of their scholarly contribution and
expertise. Historical Portraits of Women Home Scientists is an
important book for those interested in the history of women's
higher education, gender and the professions, historical
methodology, and transnational histories of women home scientists.
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