

An edition of Women and the creation of urban life (1998)
Dallas, Texas, 1843-1920
By Elizabeth York Enstam
Publish Date
1998
Publisher
Texas A&M University Press
Language
eng
Pages
284
Description:
Throughout the history of Dallas, women have worked both alongside and apart from the men now remembered as the city's founders and builders. In truth, women helped to create the definitive forms of urban life by establishing organizations and agencies that altered the responsibilities and functions of local government, amended the public conception of political issues, changed the city's physical structure, and affected the day-to-day lives of thousands of people. In Women and the Creation of Urban Life, Elizabeth York Enstam examines how women stretched, redefined, and at times erased the essentially artificial boundaries between female and male, between "the private" and "the public" as aspects of human endeavor. Enstam traces the ways national trends were expressed at the local level and analyzes women's accomplishments and the importance of their work as they assumed community leadership in perpetuating the traditions, education, fine arts, and customs of the larger culture, and in implementing Progressive principles in a specific community.
subjects: Politics and government, History, Economic conditions, Social conditions, Work and family, Employment, City and town life, Women, Kvinnor, Historia, Kvinnohistoria, Urbanisering, Women, united states, history, Women, employment, united states, Women, economic conditions, Dallas (tex.), history, Dallas (tex.), social conditions, Dallas (tex.), politics and government
Places: Texas, Dallas, Dallas (Tex.)