By uncovering how higher education and gender roles evolved in Appalachia over time, The Madison Women delivers a history that contradicts the stereotype of the region as hostile to education, highlighting colleges that proliferated the area in the 19th century. Indeed, many of these colleges were either coeducational or even specifically for women, ultimately contradicting another stereotype--that Appalachia is a region particularly hostile toward women.
Incorporating captivating mini-biographies of women who attended Madison College and who went on to change their communities in ways large and small, this book reveals how the lives of its students impart lessons about history, regional culture, and how we can shape the Appalachia's future.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Place, Culture, and Imagination: A Discussion of Methods
Small Stories, Part 1: Sarah McKittrick, Eliza Carpenter, Martha Lindsay
2. The Advantages of Education: A History of Madison College
Small Stories, Part 2: Elma Brashear, Austa Porter, M. Kate Wiser, Mary Smith, Mary Stockdale
3. Divided Arguments: Rhetorical Instruction at Madison College
Small Stories, Part 3: Sarah and Lizzie Jamison, Violet Scott, Amelia Matthews, Sue Craig
4. Madison College and Women’s Education: Acceptance and Resistance
Small Stories, Part 4: Cordelia Downard, Bell Coulter, Mollie and Elma Gaston
5. Higher Ideals: The Madison Women and Social Action
Small Stories, Part 5: Maggie Hyatt, Kate Green, Lizzie Smith, Nancy Wallace, Mary Lawrence
6. The Future is the Past: Formal Education and Appalachian History
Small Stories, Part 6: Sarah Morrison, Emma Campbell
7. What Was Lost, What Remains: Madison College’s Sister Schools
Small Stories, Part 7: Jennie Moore and Eliza Ralston, Sarah Owens Longsworth, Lizzie Moss
Conclusion: Why Does it Matter?
Endnotes
Bibliography