Professions for Girls

Creator

Date

1910

Identifier

Truby King Collection HD 6059 G7 BH41

Type

Publisher

London: T. Fisher Unwin

Abstract

The increase in industrialisation at the turn of the 20th century meant women were more frequently working outside the home. With his very definite ideas about women as mothers, King was worried that they were not taking their motherhood duties seriously enough. To him, this lapse was detrimental to society. He also thought that girls who ‘overstudied’ at school would become ‘flat-chested and unfitted for maternity’ (Olssen, 1981), and that ‘overstudy’ in both boys and girls could cause insanity. T. W. Berry’s Professions for Girls, therefore, seems an incongruous addition in King’s library.

Files

Truby King Cabinet 5 image 3.jpg

Tags

Citation

T.W. Berry, “Professions for Girls,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed November 18, 2024, https://ourheritage.ac.nz/items/show/9449.