A Victorian educational pioneer's evangelicalism, leadership, and love : Maynard's mistakes
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A Victorian educational pioneer's evangelicalism, leadership, and love : Maynard's mistakes
(Palgrave pivot)
Palgrave Macmillan, c2023
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Note
Bibliography: p. 153-160
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book examines the relatively unknown English late-Victorian educational pioneer, Constance Louisa Maynard (1849-1935), whose innovative London-based Westfield College produced the first female BAs in the mid-1880s. An atypical and powerful woman, Maynard is also notable for her unique knowledge of psychology and patriotic Evangelicalism, both of which profoundly shaped her ambitions and passions. In contrast to most history about an individual's life, this book builds a fascinating life story based upon evidence and clues from minutia. The focus is on nine enigmatic actions motivated by Maynard in her quests for educational leadership, global conversion, and same-sex love. Maynard's acts that she called "mistakes," caused deep enmities with administrators and college women. Yet amid her trials and conflicts Maynard made key decisions about her public and private life. Moreover, her so-called mistakes reveal astonishing new insights into a past mindset and the rapidly changing world in which Maynard lived.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction 2. Longing "for Excitement of Feeling," 1849-1871 3. Evangelical Prophet at Girton, 1872-1875 4. Difficult Relations, 1882-1891 5. Colonial Affairs, 1894-1904 6. "Noisy Rabble of Our Fears," 1924-1934
by "Nielsen BookData"