Pursuing Truth: How Gender Shaped Catholic Education at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland

Pursuing Truth: How Gender Shaped Catholic Education at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland

by Mary J. Oates
Pursuing Truth: How Gender Shaped Catholic Education at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland

Pursuing Truth: How Gender Shaped Catholic Education at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland

by Mary J. Oates

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Overview

In Pursuing Truth, Mary J. Oates explores the roles that religious women played in teaching generations of college and university students amid slow societal change that brought the grudging acceptance of Catholics in public life. Across the twentieth century, Catholic women's colleges modeled themselves on, and sometimes positioned themselves against, elite secular colleges. Oates describes these critical pedagogical practices by focusing on Notre Dame of Maryland University, formerly known as the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, the first Catholic college in the United States to award female students four-year degrees.

The sisters and laywomen on the faculty and in the administration at Notre Dame of Maryland persevered in their work while facing challenges from the establishment of the Catholic Church, mainline Protestant churches, and secular institutions. Pursuing Truth presents the stories of the institution's female founders, administrators, and professors whose labors led it through phases of diversification. The pattern of institutional development regarding the place of religious identity, gender and sexuality, and race that Oates finds at Notre Dame of Maryland is a paradigmatic story of change in US higher education. Similarly representative is her account of the school's effort, from the late 1960s to the present, to maintain its identity as a women's liberal arts college.

Thanks to generous funding from the Cushwa Center at the University of Notre Dame, the ebook editions of this book are available as Open Access (OA) volumes from Cornell Open (cornellpress.cornell.edu/cornell-open) and other Open Access repositories.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501753817
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 03/15/2021
Series: Cushwa Center Studies of Catholicism in Twentieth-Century America
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 300
Sales rank: 506,152
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Mary J. Oates is Research Professor Emerita of Economics at Regis College and author of The Catholic Philanthropic Tradition in America.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Women's Education and the College of Notre Dame of Maryland
1. American Catholics and Female Higher Education: Founding Catholic Women's Colleges
2. Women Educating Women: Catholic Ways and Means
3. Divided or Diverse? Questions of Class, Race, and Religious Life
4. Educating Catholic Women: The Liberal and Practical Arts at the College of Notre Dame
5. Sectarian or Free? Catholic Identity on Trial in the 1960s and 1970s
6. "Convent Colleges": Social Mores and Educated Women
Conclusion: A Catholic Women's Liberal Arts College

What People are Saying About This

Margaret McGuinness

In Pursuing Truth one quickly comes to understand that this is an institution that has persevered despite the fact that—quite frankly—the odds have been stacked against it since the beginning. Oates has crafted a narrative that places Notre Dame of Maryland within the context of higher education, the history of women religious, and US Catholic history.

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