The white missionary couple is an assumed presence in mission history; its mid-nineteenth-century ubiquity read back into the formation of evangelical mission. This article questions that assumption by creating a chronological and conceptual framework for the professional trajectory of missionary women, and demonstrates that it was on the issue of female mission engagement that complex debates about the nature of mission were negotiated and defined. The rise of the missionary wife shaped mission history, through both the complementary rise of the civilizing mission and through active female spiritual agency. By the mid-nineteenth century, however, it was clear that missionary wives had created a space they could not fill in the evermore ins...
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) (1897–1909) and the Woman’s Missionary Council (WMC) (...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s rol...
In 1904 women were granted voting and representational rights in the Norwegian Missionary Society. A...
Starting in the mid nineteenth century, middle and lower class women in the West started to serve as...
Protestant American women felt compelled to help native women in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East i...
This article looks at the gender dimension of religious missions administered by the Presbyterian Ch...
This thesis examines the motivations of British female missionaries and missionaries' wives in Aotea...
In the 19th century, women missionaries found acceptance in the public domain and opportunities for...
This essay will examine the recruitment of single British women by leading Protestant missionary soc...
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s rol...
Africa occupies a special place within missionary history. It was seen in the nineteenth century as ...
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) (1897–1909) and the Woman’s Missionary Council (WMC) (...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) (1897–1909) and the Woman’s Missionary Council (WMC) (...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s rol...
In 1904 women were granted voting and representational rights in the Norwegian Missionary Society. A...
Starting in the mid nineteenth century, middle and lower class women in the West started to serve as...
Protestant American women felt compelled to help native women in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East i...
This article looks at the gender dimension of religious missions administered by the Presbyterian Ch...
This thesis examines the motivations of British female missionaries and missionaries' wives in Aotea...
In the 19th century, women missionaries found acceptance in the public domain and opportunities for...
This essay will examine the recruitment of single British women by leading Protestant missionary soc...
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s rol...
Africa occupies a special place within missionary history. It was seen in the nineteenth century as ...
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) (1897–1909) and the Woman’s Missionary Council (WMC) (...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society (WFMS) (1897–1909) and the Woman’s Missionary Council (WMC) (...
The article discusses marriage practice and discourse within the Lutheran Norwegian Missionary Socie...
Although by 1900, over 60% of the British missionary workforce in South Asia was female, women’s rol...