Bound By a Mighty Vow: Sisterhood and Women's Fraternities, 1870-1920 Buy on Amazon

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Bound By a Mighty Vow: Sisterhood and Women's Fraternities, 1870-1920

PublisherNYU Press
CategoryPaperback
20.80 26.00 USD
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Book Details

Author(s)Diana B. Turk
PublisherNYU Press
ISBN / ASIN0814782825
ISBN-139780814782828
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,030,971
CategoryPaperback
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

Sororities are often thought of as exclusive clubs for socially inclined college students, but Bound by a Mighty Vow, a history of the women's Greek system, demonstrates that these organizations have always served more serious purposes. Diana Turk explores the founding and development of the earliest sororities (then called women's fraternities) and explains how these groups served as support networks to help the first female collegians succeed in the hostile world of nineteenth century higher education.

Turk goes on to look at how and in what ways sororities changed over time. While the first generation focused primarily on schoolwork, later Greek sisters used their fraternity connections to ensure social status, gain access to jobs and job training, and secure financial and emotional support as they negotiated life in turn-of-the-century America. The costs they paid were conformity to certain tightly prescribed beliefs of how "ideal" fraternity women should act and what "ideal" fraternity women should do.

Drawing on primary source documents written and preserved by the fraternity women themselves, as well as on oral history interviews conducted with fraternity officers and alumnae members, Bound by a Mighty Vow uncovers the intricate history of these early women's networks and makes a bold statement about the ties that have bound millions of American women to one another in the name of sisterhood.

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