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Pittsburgh, 1924 Pittsburgh, 1924
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“Protestantism Is Disorganization”: Ecumenicalism in the Churchwoman’s Council “Protestantism Is Disorganization”: Ecumenicalism in the Churchwoman’s Council
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From Missionary Women to Churchwomen: National Reorganization From Missionary Women to Churchwomen: National Reorganization
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3 Learning to Cooperate by Cooperating
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Published:February 2024
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Abstract
This chapter is an institutional history of the development of White-led churchwomen’s organizations at the local and national level in the 1920s and 1930s. Examining the different invocations of “cooperation” in the practice of committee meetings, I argue that Protestant’s developing ecumenical movement can be interpreted as an imperial form. This chapter explores how White Protestants strategized how to maintain and increase their influence amid concerns about religious and racial diversity in northern cities, and how White Protestant women preserved the missionary movement’s Christian imperial feminism as they justified the value of their separate women’s organizations and redefined “missions” to a much larger program of “Christianizing” social, racial, and world relations.
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