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A Sensitive Independence

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For nearly half a century, the Woman's Missionary Society (WMS) of the Methodist Church of Canada provided a rare opportunity for more than 300 single women to work in Japan, West China, and Canada...
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  • 01 April 1992
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For nearly half a century, the Woman's Missionary Society (WMS) of the Methodist Church of Canada provided a rare opportunity for more than 300 single women to work in Japan, West China, and Canada. The all-female administrative structure of the WMS and the remoteness of the missionary stations provided relief from much of the gender-based tension and professional jealousy that inhibited women's entrance to and advancement in male-dominated professions in Canada. Within a profession where, in theory at least, neither their spinsterhood nor their sex was held against them, these women sought to secure a more equal place in the Methodist Church and society than was usually possible in Victorian Canada.

In contrast to their idealized image as christian altruists, the missionaries responded pragmatically to the harsh social realities they faced. They established WMS girls' schools in Japan and China, made efforts to curtail infanticide and footbinding in West China, and campaigned against the exploitation of women of immigrant families in Canada. These were radical schemes, particularly when compared with the traditional societies and cultures where the missionaries not merely served but struggled for small victories.

Rosemary Gagan concludes, however, that in spite of the limitations imposed by gender, place, and the institutional biases of the WMS, these women succeeded remarkably well. For some WMS recruits, the remoteness and brutality of their chosen vocation threatened to destroy their physical, emotional, and even spiritual well-being. For others, especially the least qualified women who were consigned to work among Canada's indigenous peoples and immigrants, missionary work quickly lost its romantic gloss. The most accomplished recruits, socially and intellectually, were sent to the politically visible stations of the Orient where they flourished as professional altruists. Gagan suggests that the latter were likely to emerge as professional women who remained with the Society until death or retirement while the former merely bridged the years between dependence on parents and the establishment of their own households. Gagan's analysis of the backgrounds and careers of WMS missionaries demythologizes their experience and reveals them to be multi-dimensional, ambitious, and energetic career women whose religion was a vital aspect of their private and public lives.

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Price: $125.00
Pages: 312
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Series: McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion
Publication Date: 01 April 1992
ISBN: 9780773508965
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Canada / General, RELIGION / Christian Ministry / Missions
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"Based on careful and extensive archival research ... this book is an essential foundation for ... a better understanding of the specific function of women within mission history, and the missionary role itself within the context of women's history and changing gender roles." Margo Gewurtz, Department of History, York University. "Until recently, church histories have ignored women missionaries and women's history has concentrated on the administrators and supporters of missionary societies rather than the missionaries themselves ... this book makes an original contribution to the field of church and women's history ... and to the growing literature on women and work." Wendy Mitchinson, Department of History, University of Waterloo.