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Jane Addams was a famous social activist living in Chicago at the turn of the 20th century. She’s perhaps most famous for introducing the Settlement movement to the United States and for founding Hull House, a hugely influential settlement house in Chicago.
Settlement houses were founded on the idea of uplifting the poor working class by quartering the rich and poor together in close proximity. By living together under the guidance of settlement workers, the poor would have access to communal education, healthcare, day care, food, and shelter, allowing them to improve their positions in society instead of being ground under heel by the privations of poverty and the brutality of workhouses. Immigrants in particular could take advantage of the settlement’s safety net, helping them naturalize more easily in their new country as they struggled to find stability while both working and raising children.
Hull House, named after the house’s original owner, was Addams’ life work. It brought together the urban poor—mostly recently-settled immigrants—together into a vast thirteen-building complex near the heart of Chicago’s downtown. In this book Addams describes the house, its founding, and its operations; because running the house was such a major part of her life, she considered this book to be her autobiography of sorts. Hull House remained open until 2012, operating continuously for over 120 years.
For her work at Hull House and for her involvement in the Peace Movement of World War I, Addams was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, becoming the award’s first American woman recipient. At the time of her death she was the most well-known female public figure in America.
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Subjects
Addams, jane, 1860-1935, Social settlements, Social service, history, Hull-house (chicago, ill.), Chicago (ill.), history, Chicago (ill.), social conditions, Women social reformers, History, Social conditions, Biography, Social service, Chicago (Ill.), Hull House (Chicago, Ill.), Chicago Hull House, Classic Literature, Fiction, Hull-House (Chicago, Ill.)., Social Work, Nonfiction, Soc. condit, Chicago, Hull House (Chicago, Ill.)., Women social workers, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Women, LITERARY CRITICISM, American, General, Fiction, general, Religious Missions, PovertyPeople
Jane Addams (1860-1935)Places
Illinois, Chicago, United States, Chicago (Ill.)Showing 11 featured editions. View all 115 editions?
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Twenty years at Hull-House: illustrated and unabridged
2009, Feather Trail Press
in English
1449582192 9781449582197
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Jane Addams's narrative of life in an immigrant urban neighborhood provides students with an introduction to the issues of the Progressive era and the tenets of social activism. This new teaching edition reduces Addams's original text by about 35 percent, trimming illustrative detail to focus on the ideological underpinnings of the original work. The author sketches a brief biographical portrait of Addams, outlines the decisions and convictions that led her to found Hull-House, and includes a vivid picture of turn-of-the-century Chicago. Related documents include a description of life at Hull-House from the perspective of an immigrant who frequented it, an early review of Hull-House, and perspectives from other reformers.
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September 10, 2023 | Edited by bitnapper | Merge works (MRID: 78944) |
September 8, 2023 | Edited by bitnapper | merge authors |
September 5, 2023 | Edited by David Scotson | Edited without comment. |
February 8, 2022 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from standard_ebooks:jane-addams record |