Richmond Marsha L
Department of History, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA.
Endeavour. 2024 Jun;48(2):100939. doi: 10.1016/j.endeavour.2024.100939. Epub 2024 Jul 16.
Women seeking to work in horticulture in the early twentieth century were the beneficiaries of developments put in motion by the late nineteenth-century women's rights movement. From the 1860s, feminists and social reformers in Europe and America promoted the opening of higher education to women. After success on this front, by 1900, women's advocates pushed for expanding work opportunities suitable for middle-class women, including in horticulture. This article contributes to the historiography of women and gender in horticulture and agriculture by tracing the opening of horticultural and agricultural schools and employment opportunities for women in Germany and Austria. The analysis shows that while the new schools were modeled on earlier examples in Britain, the programs' curricula were based on that of the German and Austrian agricultural colleges. This European expansion of science-based horticultural education provided middle-class women with occupational prospects that proved more fruitful than university degrees until the rise of anti-Semitism in the years leading up to World War II.
20世纪初寻求从事园艺工作的女性是19世纪末女权运动推动的发展的受益者。从19世纪60年代起,欧美地区的女权主义者和社会改革家推动高等教育向女性开放。在这方面取得成功后,到1900年,女性权益倡导者推动扩大适合中产阶级女性的工作机会,包括园艺领域。本文通过追溯德国和奥地利园艺及农业学校的开办以及女性的就业机会,为园艺和农业领域的女性与性别史研究做出了贡献。分析表明,虽然新学校是以英国早期的范例为蓝本,但课程设置却是基于德国和奥地利农业学院的课程。这种以科学为基础的园艺教育在欧洲的扩展为中产阶级女性提供了职业前景,在第二次世界大战前几年反犹主义兴起之前,这些前景比大学学位更有成效。