In episode 44, to celebrate International Women’s Day on the 8th March, we take a look at “Women and Philanthropy”. Exploring famous female philanthropists past and present, the role that charitable work has played in the emancipation of women, and the ways in which philanthropy has been used as a tool to fight for women’s rights. Including

 

Fascianting female philanthropists from history: Angela Burdett Coutts, Octavia Hill, Olivia Russell Sage, Beatrix Potter, Jenny Lind and Madam CJ Walker The importance of philanthropy as a bridge between the domestic sphere and the public sphere and the role it therefore played in changing women’s perceptions of their own capacities & changing mens’ perception of the role of women. Philanthropy as an outlet for the misery and frustration of Victorian women Is there such as a thing as “feminine” philanthropy? Philanthropy and the women’s suffrage movement Philanthropy and the women’s anti-suffrage movement Philanthropy, women’s liberation & feminismn in the 1960s/70s- how effective is philanthropy at addressing structural inequality? Can traditional funders support non-hierarchical networks and groups without subverting them? Women in philanthropy today: self-made millionaries & husband and wife teams. SDG 5 and global women’s issues Philanthropy and the #MeToo movement Gender equality in the nonprofit world?

 

Related Links

Francis, Megan M, “The Price of Civil Rights: Black Lives, White Funding & Movement Capture” My HistPhil blog, “Networked Social Movements and “the Tyranny of Styructurelessness”” Smithsonian Museum, “Madam CJ Walker’s Philanthropy” Samples, “The Humbug & The Nightingale: PT Barnum, Jenny Lind and the Branding of a Star Singer for Amercian Reception Public Good by Private Means (my book) Prochaska, The Voluntary Impulse Prochaska, Women and Philanthropy in Nineteenth Century England Simey, Charity Rediscovered: A study of philanthropic effort in nineteenth century Liverpool