ABSTRACT

Adele Marion Fielde, born in 1839, was a teacher, an evangelist, a social activist, scientist, lexicographer, writer and lecturer. As an American missionary in China, she became a local teacher and evangelist, struggling to reconcile her Baptist upbringing with her restless intellect. As an energetic social activist, she was a major figure in the suffragist movement, the abolition of the slave trade and the founding of two hospitals. As a scientist she conducted seminal research which is still discussed and studied today.
This book provides an in-depth biographical study of the life of this remarkable woman, exploring her impact on her contemporary society, and her abiding influence on the scientific and academic communities to the present day.
The author examines the social and religious constraints on Fielde's life and work and discusses her efforts to transcend these through the construction of a personal system of belief which emphasized the importance of helping others. He demonstrates how, as a woman of immense energy and intellectual ability, she was able to influence the scientific and political communities despite their prevailing negative attitude towards women.
Adele Marion Fielde will be of vital interest to scholars concerned with the study of gender and the history of science.

chapter |3 pages

Prologue

chapter 1|8 pages

Beginnings

chapter 2|10 pages

Out of the nest

chapter 3|21 pages

Bangkok

chapter 4|8 pages

Passage through America

chapter 5|30 pages

Swatow, China

chapter 6|13 pages

Philadelphia, 1883–1885

chapter 7|11 pages

Last years in the Far East

chapter 8|11 pages

The voyage home

chapter 9|19 pages

New York

chapter 10|11 pages

Religion, science, and the occult

chapter 11|19 pages

Ants

chapter 12|21 pages

Seattle

chapter 13|5 pages

A model death