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Charitable Words Women, Philanthropy, and the Language of Charity in Nineteenth-Century Dublin
Foreword by Maria Luddy
Book Code: C7930
ISBN: 0-275-97930-X
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-97930-0
226 pages, tables
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 10/30/2004
List Price: $98.95 (UK Sterling Price: £57.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Women's Studies
Series Number: 202
Reviews:
  • [A] most valuable addition to the literature on Dublin charities, on women and philanthropy, on nursing, and on language. The bibliography is an excellent resource in its own right, and the thorough footnoting will actively assist researchers enquiring further into any of the many intriguing avenues opened up....[t]he book is carefully produced, and must be commended as a model of thoughtful scholarship.
    —Irish Economic and Social History
    2006
  • [T]he book has value in revealing material previously not explored, particularly so as Dublin adds the question of sectarianism to the development of an infrastructure of charities essential in a period of underemployment, great poverty, and lack of government initiatives.
    —American Historical Review
    February 2006
  • This study is carefully written and impressively researched, and Preston makes particularly good use of the pamphlet literature....Charitable Words is a fine first book, which adds to both our knowledge of Irish women's history and the history of philanthropy.
    —New Hibernia Review
    Winter 2005
Description: Mismanaged by local authority, in the 19th-century, Dublin lacked sufficient industrial development to provide adequate employment. Dublin's charitable workers attempted to improve the lives of the thousands who flocked to the city in search of relief. As a means to examining the hidden incentives of charity, the author offers a discussion of the language of charity in this setting. She notes how contemporary notions of race, class, and religion influenced how Ireland's philanthropists thought of and related to the poor. While much has been written on the perceived racial inferiority of the Celt as compared to the Anglo-Saxon, Preston suggests that the Irish upper classes, in seeking to gain equal footing with the British elite, adopted the same language to describe the poor. Intense sectarian strife marred Irish charities and undermined the smooth operation of social services. Preston offers insight by focusing on two women philanthropists who battled for the souls of Ireland's children. She also explores those who remained above the fray, such as the Religious Society of Friends in Ireland, who offered aid to all regardless of creed. Within the charitable records of this group, Preston contends that one can see how the Society changed over time and that, in Ireland, the industrial revolution as well as the 1798 Rebellion, contributed to the Society adapting to the mainstream. Finally, the women of charity helped to establish a modern nursing system for Ireland, and this work details their efforts at turning nursing into a respectable profession for women.
Table of Contents:
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction
  • Setting the Stage: Dublin and Ireland in the 19th Century
  • Race, Class, and Religion in the Language of Dublin's Charities
  • Conversion Amidst Compassion: Saving the Souls of the Poor
  • An Inner Light: The Charitable Work of Dublin's Quakers
  • The Good Nurse: Women Philanthropists and the Creation of a Career
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
LC Card Number: 2004012296
LCC Class: HV541
Dewey Class: 361
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