Founder of Henry Street Settlement on New York's Lower East Side as
well as the Visiting Nurse Service of New York, Lillian Wald
(1867-1940) was a remarkable social welfare activist. She was also
a second-generation German Jewish immigrant who developed close
associations with Jewish New York even as she consistently
dismissed claims that her work emerged from a fundamentally Jewish
calling. Challenging the conventional understanding of the
Progressive movement as having its origins in Anglo-Protestant
teachings, Marjorie Feld offers a critical biography of Wald in
which she examines the crucial and complex significance of Wald's
ethnicity to her life's work. In addition, by studying the Jewish
community's response to Wald throughout her public career from 1893
to 1933, Feld demonstrates the changing landscape of identity
politics in the first half of the twentieth century.
Feld argues that Wald's innovative reform work was the product of
both her own family's experience with immigration and assimilation
as Jews in late-nineteenth-century Rochester, New York, and her
encounter with Progressive ideals at her settlement house in
Manhattan. As an ethnic working on behalf of other ethnics, Wald
developed a universal vision that was at odds with the ethnic
particularism with which she is now identified. These tensions
between universalism and particularism, assimilation and group
belonging, persist to this day. Thus Feld concludes with an
exploration of how, after her death, Wald's accomplishments have
been remembered in popular perceptions and scholarly works. For the
first time, Feld locates Wald in the ethnic landscape of her own
time as well as ours.