Jane Addams and Her Vision of America, 1st edition

Published by Pearson (February 22, 2011) © 2012

  • Sandra Opdycke
$47.99

  • Hardcover, paperback or looseleaf edition
  • Affordable rental option for select titles

For courses in U.S. history (after 1865), biography, 20th century America (1900 - 2000), history of women in America (since 1865), history of African-Americans, American labor history and the Civil Rights Movement (1940 - 1968).

A presentation of Jane Addams' story in clear, non-technical language, focusing primarily on her philosophy and achievements as well as their significance in her own time and ours.

Jane Addams devoted her life to working for social change. Today, more than 70 years after her death, she still commands our attention because of her coherent and humane social vision and the manifold ways in which she worked to apply that vision to the problems of her time. Sandra Opdycke's biography brings Addams' life and work alive for students and general readers in a way no author has before.

Paperback, brief and inexpensive, each of the titles in the Library of American Biography series focuses on a figure whose actions and ideas significantly influenced the course of American history and national life. In addition, each biography relates the life of its subject to the broader themes and developments of the times.

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Acknowledgments

Introduction

 

Part I: Inventing a Life of Service

CHAPTER 1 FINDING THE PATH

 

CHAPTER 2 REACHING OUT TO THE NEIGHBORS

 

CHAPTER 3 PUTTING DEMOCRACY INTO PRACTICE

 

CHAPTER 4 CHOOSING COLLABORATION

 

Part II: Working for Reform

 CHAPTER 5 FOCUSING ON WOMEN

 

CHAPTER 6 NOURISHING THE SPIRIT OF YOUNG PEOPLE

 

CHAPTER 7 SPEAKING UP FOR LABOR

 

CHAPTER 8 TAKING PROGRESSIVISM TO THE NATION

 

Part III: Broader Horizons

CHAPTER 9 TRYING TO STOP A WAR

 

CHAPTER 10 SEARCHING FOR HOPE IN THE 1920S

 

CHAPTER 11 LOOKING FORWARD, LOOKING BACKWARD

 

CHAPTER 12 LEAVING A LEGACY

 

Discussion Questions

A Note on the Sources

Index

 

Sandra Opdycke

Sandra Opdycke is the associate director of the Institute for Innovation in Social Policy at Vassar College. A student of Mark Carnes, she received her Ph.D. from Columbia in 1995 and has lectured and written extensively on urban history, women's history and public health, including No One Was Turned Away: The Role of Public Hospitals in New York City Since 1900 (Oxford, 1999) and The Routledge Historical Atlas of Women in America (Routledge, 2000). She has also contributed 70 essays to American National Biography (Oxford, 1999), which was edited by authors John A. Garraty and Mark Carnes. 

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