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Women becoming professionals: British secular reformers and missionaries in Colonial India, 1870-1900.

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TLDR
Vibert et al. as mentioned in this paper examined the development of these roles in the missionary and secular philanthropic communities and how these women used periodicals as a space to implicitly demonstrate their competence and explicitly argue for their status as educators and medical workers.
Abstract
Supervisory Committee Dr. Elizabeth Vibert, (Department of History) Supervisor Dr. Lynne Marks, (Department of History) Departmental Member This paper discusses the means by which some British women created professional roles for themselves out of their philanthropic work in India between 1880 and 1900. I examine the development of these roles in the missionary and secular philanthropic communities and how these women used periodicals as a space to implicitly demonstrate their competence and explicitly argue for their status as educators and medical workers. Colonial India provided a particular context of imperial ideals and gendered realities: Indian women were believed to be particularly deprived of learning, medical care and ―civilisation‖ by custom and culture, and Englishwomen could call on the rhetoric of imperial duty to legitimise their care of these disadvantaged women. I argue that India provided the means for British women to demonstrate their capabilities and to involve themselves in the ongoing nineteenth-century project to incorporate women into previously masculine professional societies.

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Citations
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The rhetoric of english India

TL;DR: In this paper, the rhetoric of English India has been studied in the context of the history of European ideas, and the rhetoric has been analyzed in terms of English-to-Indians.
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Gender, Sex and Subordination in England 1500–1800

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References
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MonographDOI

Insurgent sepoys : Europe views the revolt of 1857

TL;DR: In this article, a view of the Indian Uprising in the Spanish Press is given, with a focus on the rebellion of an Indian Temple Dancer and its response to the British response to it.
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‘Merely Birds of Passage’: Lady Hariot Dufferin’s travel writings and medical work in India, 1884–1888

TL;DR: In this paper, the travel writings and medical work in India of Lady Hariot Dufferin, Vicereine of India between 1884 and 1888 are examined, and the nature of her complicity in the Raj, as well as the gendered nature of the separate public role she created for herself in relation to her "zenana work" in providing medical care for the women of India.
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Images of Work, Glimpses of Professionalism in Selected Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Novels

TL;DR: The early 20th-century novelists in both England and America created many images of working women, from the stereotypical governess trying to maintain her gentility to those struggling to survive as mill workers, seamstresses, or prostitutes as mentioned in this paper.
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The Missionary Narrative as Coercive Interrogation: seduction, confession and self‐presentation in women’s ‘letters home’ 1

TL;DR: The authors argue that in the simultaneously public and private act of letter writing, women missionaries created complex sexual and political self-narratives, and they repeatedly forced their audiences to discover the various ways in which they had been seduced by this East, and had thereby deviated from accepted feminine norms.
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