Emily J. Manktelow
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Missionary marriage
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This chapter expresses that recognising the difficulties missionary women faced in navigating structures of patriarchy and domesticity need not lead us inexorably away from an understanding of their lives as vocational, spiritual and indeed professional. It addresses the follow-up question, what could missionary wife do? What were the parameters of her professional, public or vocational existence? What did it mean for a white missionary woman to be a missionary wife? Mutual spirituality, kindness and love were fundamental to a happy missionary marriage, and a happy missionary marriage was fundamental to a successful mission. On the one hand, domestic normativity meant that correct domestic arrangements were an important part of mission work in itself. On the other, the companionate missionary marriage provided a conceptual space in which missionary women could weave domesticity into vocation, and could fulfil their spiritual agency through domestic action.

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Missionary families

Race, gender and generation on the spiritual frontier

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