Education was decisive in recasting women's subjectivity and the
lived reality of their collective experience in post-Revolutionary
and antebellum America. Asking how and why women shaped their lives
anew through education, Mary Kelley measures the significant
transformation in individual and social identities fostered by
female academies and seminaries. Constituted in a curriculum that
matched the course of study at male colleges, women's liberal
learning, Kelley argues, played a key role in one of the most
profound changes in gender relations in the nation's history: the
movement of women into public life.
By the 1850s, the large majority of women deeply engaged in public
life as educators, writers, editors, and reformers had been
schooled at female academies and seminaries. Although most women
did not enter these professions, many participated in networks of
readers, literary societies, or voluntary associations that became
the basis for benevolent societies, reform movements, and activism
in the antebellum period. Kelley's analysis demonstrates that
female academies and seminaries taught women crucial writing,
oration, and reasoning skills that prepared them to claim the
rights and obligations of citizenship.