ABSTRACT

The Educated Woman is a comparative study of the ideas on female nature that informed debates on women’s higher education in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in three western European countries. Exploring the multi-layered roles of science and medicine in constructions of sexual difference in these debates, the book also pays attention to the variety of ways in which contemporary feminists negotiated and reconstituted conceptions of the female mind and its relationship to the body. While recognising similarities, Rowold shows how in each country the higher education debates and the underlying conceptions of women’s nature were shaped by distinct historical contexts.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Women's Higher Education and the Female Mind and Body

part I|52 pages

Britain

chapter 1|31 pages

Science, Feminism, and Sexual Difference

Moulding Female Nature through Higher Education, 1860s–1890

part II|85 pages

Germany

chapter 3|30 pages

Women, Bildung, and Culture, 1865–1900

chapter 4|32 pages

Die akademische Frau

Motherhood, Race, and Culture, 1890–1914

chapter 5|21 pages

Masculine Minds in Female Bodies

Sexology and Women's Higher Education, 1869–1914

part III|47 pages

Spain

chapter 7|19 pages

After 1898

Degeneration and Regeneration

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion