This article analyses the effects of the Victorian female civilizing mission, with its central motif of spiritual womanhood, in shaping women's aspirations towards the Anglican priesthood during the twentieth century. The considerable development of nineteenth-century women's ex officio ministry is documented, and the ensuing clash in early twentieth-century male/clerical and female perspectives on women's appropriate role within church life is analysed. The article concludes with a brief discussion of the legacy of the Victorian civilising mission evident within the post-1960 Anglican debate over women's ordination.
CITATION STYLE
Daggers, J. (2001). The Victorian female civilising mission and women’s aspirations towards priesthood in the Church of England. Women’s History Review, 10(4), 651–670. https://doi.org/10.1080/09612020100200604
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