Cazden, Elizabeth. Antoinette Brown Blackwell. Feminist Press.
31
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | Although ABB
and Lucy Stone devoted their lives to working for similar ends, they frequently disagreed with each other. While Blackwell was committed to the ideology and institutions of organized Christianity, Cazden, Elizabeth. Antoinette Brown Blackwell. Feminist Press. 31 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Edith Mary Moore | Edith Mary Croucher
, aged twenty-one, was married at the Congregationalist
church at Bromley in Kent to Thomas William Moore
, an architect and surveyor. Moore, Sarah Elizabeth. Emails to Orlando about Edith Mary Moore. |
Cultural formation | Pamela Hansford Johnson | Religion, too, became important to PHJ
in her youth. Though she notes a streak of emotional Calvinism Johnson, Pamela Hansford. Important to Me. Macmillan; Scribner. 13 |
Cultural formation | Jessie White Mario | JWM
was born to probably white parents. Her mother was of American descent and her father belonged to an old Portsmouth family. He ran a very strict middle-class Congregationalist
household, against which Jessie (an agnostic... |
Cultural formation | Susanna Moodie | Susanna Strickland, later SM
, joined a Congregationalist
church, marking a significant step in her spiritual development. Thurston, John. “‘The Casket of Truth’: The Social Significance of Susanna Moodie’s Spiritual Dilemmas”. Canadian Poetry, Vol. 35 . 4 Peterman, Michael. Susanna Moodie: A Life. ECW Press. 38 |
Cultural formation | Susanna Moodie | |
Cultural formation | Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence | |
Cultural formation | Catharine Maria Sedgwick | Born into a wealthy upper-class American family, she was for several years a member of Dr Mason's Congregationalist Church
. She abandoned this denomination, however, in 1821 when she followed her dying father's example, and... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Siddal | ES
was not as thoroughly working-class as has been claimed, but she came from a relatively humble urban English background. There is little evidence of her personal attitudes, but there is evidence of membership in... |
Cultural formation | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | Despite Joseph Brown's former studies in theology and hopes of becoming a minister, the Brown family did not actively practise religion until Antoinette was about seven. They then began attending Henrietta's liberal Congregational Church
after... |
Cultural formation | Harriet Beecher Stowe | In 1816, HBS
went to stay for a time with her grandmother in a setting widely different from her birth home. Her father's home is described as being Congregational
and democratic in contrast to the... |
Cultural formation | Hesba Stretton | |
Cultural formation | Antoinette Brown Blackwell | Although ABB
's religious upbringing had been more liberal than orthodox, she was ordained and made the minister of an orthodox Congregational Church
in South Butler. Cazden, Elizabeth. Antoinette Brown Blackwell. Feminist Press. 88 |
Cultural formation | Emma Jane Worboise | The Literary World was apparently mistaken in calling EJWthe novelist of Evangelical Dissent and in speculating as to whether or not she ever left the Anglican
Church. Melnyk, Julie. “Evangelical Theology and Feminist Polemic: Emma Jane Worboise’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Overdale</span>”;. Women’s Theology in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Transfiguring the Faith of Their Fathers, edited by Julie Melnyk, Garland, pp. 107-22. 109 |
Cultural formation | Laura Ormiston Chant | She was born to a professional, presumably white, English family. They seem to have been initially Anglican, but after they moved to London when Laura was young, her father's
disapproval of the high-church services at... |
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