ABSTRACT

This book makes a significant contribution to the burgeoning field of childhood studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture by drawing on the intersecting fields of girlhood, evangelicalism, and reform to investigate texts written in North America about girls, for girls, and by girls. Responding both to the intellectual excitement generated by the rise of girlhood studies, as well as to the call by recent scholars to recognize the significance of religion as a meaningful category in the study of nineteenth-century literature and culture, this collection locates evangelicalism at the center of its inquiry into girlhood. Contributors draw on a wide range of texts, including canonical literature by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Susan Warner, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, and overlooked archives such as US Methodist Sunday School fiction, children’s missionary periodicals, and the Christian Recorder, the flagship newspaper of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church. These essays investigate representations of girlhood that engage, codify, and critique normative Protestant constructions of girlhood. Contributors examine girlhood in the context of reform, revealing the ways in which Protestantism at once constrained and enabled female agency. Drawing on a range of critical perspectives, including African American Studies, Disability Studies, Gender Studies, and Material Culture Studies, this volume enriches our understanding of nineteenth-century childhood by focusing on the particularities of girlhood, expanding it beyond that of the white able-bodied middle-class girl and attending to the intersectionality of identity and religion.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Evangelical Periodicals

chapter 1|21 pages

“Heart Talk”

Chinese Schoolgirls’ Letters to American Girls

chapter 2|14 pages

Lessons for Girls in Sunday School Stories

Representations of Evangelical Femininity in Nineteenth-Century Religious Periodicals for Children in Protestant Canada

chapter 3|19 pages

Daughters of a Reading People

Representations of African American Girlhood and Female Literacy in the Christian Recorder

part II|2 pages

Whiteness and Grace

chapter |22 pages

“never was born [again]”

Grace, Blackness, and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Domestic Evangelicalism

part III|2 pages

Evangelicalism and Work

chapter 6|25 pages

Rebecca Harding Davis, Louisa May Alcott, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

Saving the World by Reclaiming Caritas

chapter 7|17 pages

She “had such things to say!”

Listening to “deaf-mute” Catty in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s The Silent Partner

chapter 8|15 pages

Dwarfism and the Evangelical

Mary Garrettson’s Call for Reform in Little Mabel and Her Sunlit Home and Little Mabel’s Friends

part IV|2 pages

Friends and Family

chapter 9|19 pages

“love of kindred spirits”

Queer Friendship and the Evangelical Bildungsroman from The Wide, Wide World to Anne of Green Gables

chapter 10|19 pages

The Fortunate Fall

Disability and the Marriage Market in Martha Finley’s Elsie’s Children and Elsie’s Widowhood

chapter 11|17 pages

Heavenly Fathers

Patriarchy, Paternity, and Affiliation in The Lamplighter