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Bordelon, Suzanne – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This essay examines women's commencement addresses presented from 1910 to 1915 at Vassar College. These addresses are significant because they reveal the students' rhetorical education and the "available means" upon which these women drew in developing a public voice. By prompting reflection and the potential for change, the commencement…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Females, Rhetorical Criticism, Rhetorical Invention
Gold, David – History of Education Quarterly, 2010
Scholars have long debated the complicity of Southern white women after the Civil War in helping create a racialist and racist regional identity and denying or delaying civil rights for African Americans. These studies have largely focused on the activities of elite white women property owners, club members, and writers. Yet few scholars have…
Descriptors: Race, Student Attitudes, Females, Racial Attitudes
Inness, Sherrie A. – 1995
This book examines the many popular representations of student life at women's colleges produced in the United States during the Progressive Era. According to the book, in hundreds of college novels, newspaper accounts, popular periodical essays, and scientific treatises, the "college woman" was described and defined in a period when…
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Context, Females, Fiction