ABSTRACT

Caroline Bartlett Crane’s robust vision of women’s work and her national impact as America’s Housekeeper highlights the gendered nature of being a sociologist, a woman, and doing sociology. Contemporary sociologists are disconnected from their female predecessors. Like Sisyphus, each generation of sociologists is condemned to push the boulder of women’s knowledge and experience back to the top of the patriarchal mountain of the discipline. Although women in sociology like Caroline Bartlett Crane, the subject of this book, have been brilliant social analysts and powerful public figures for over a century, their work is repeatedly ignored, forgotten, and lost. I hope that we can stop rolling this boulder up the mountain of male ignorance and control and see the world and new horizon from the mountaintop. Linda Rynbrandt’s book helps anchor that boulder by analyzing sociology from a new location. Rynbrandt’s perspective examines sociology through the work and life of Caroline Bartlett Crane, historical analysis, the political economy of the home, the gendered landscape of the Progressive Era, and feminist thought. Rynbrandt initiates this series on Women and Sociological Theory with an exciting subject and an innovative perspective connecting the past, present, and future.

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

“Lost Women” in Social Thought and Action

chapter Chapter 2|15 pages

The Life and Times of Caroline Bartlett Crane

chapter Chapter 3|21 pages

Salvation, Sanitation and the Social Gospel

chapter Chapter 4|21 pages

Images, Ideology and Networks in Progressive Reform

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

“America's Housekeeper” Fights for Pure Food

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

Building the Progressive Dream: Designs for Reform

chapter Chapter 7|17 pages

Public Visions and Private Nightmares

chapter Chapter 8|21 pages

Conclusion: Beyond Women Lost and Found