Guiding Modern Girls

Girlhood, Empire, and Internationalism in the 1920s and 1930s

By Kristine Alexander
Categories: History, World History, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774835879, 296 pages, November 2017
Paperback : 9780774835886, 296 pages, July 2018
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774835893, 296 pages, November 2017
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774835909, 296 pages, November 2017
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774835916, 296 pages, November 2017

Table of contents

Introduction

1 Guiding’s Beginnings: Victorian Antecedents and Early Twentieth-Century Growth

2 Guiding Girls toward the Private Sphere: Training for Homekeeping, Mothercraft, and Matrimony

3 “We Must Give the Modern Girl a Training in Citizenship”: Preparing Girls for Political and Social Service

4 Moulding Bodies and Identities in the Outdoors: Religion, Gender, and Racial-National Narratives at Girl Guide Camps

5 “The Mass Ornament”: Rallies, Pageantry, Exercise, and Drill

6 Imperial and International Sisterhood: Possibilities and Limits

Conclusion

Note; Bibliography; Index

Description

Across the British Empire and the world, the 1920s and 1930s were a time of unprecedented social and cultural change. Girls and young women were at the heart of many of these shifts. Out of this milieu, the Girl Guide movement emerged as a response to modern concerns about gender, race, class, and social instability. In this book, Kristine Alexander analyzes the ways in which Guiding sought to mould young people in England, Canada, and India. It is a fascinating account that connects the histories of girlhood, internationalism, and empire, while asking how girls and young women understood and responded to Guiding’s attempts to lead them toward a “useful” feminine future.

Awards

  • Winner, Wilson Book Prize, The Wilson Institute for Canadian History at McMaster University 2017
  • Short-listed, 2019 Ferguson Prize, Canadian Historical Association 2019
  • Winner, Founder's Prize for Best English-language Book, Canadian History of Education Association 2018

Reviews

Kristine Alexander makes a significant contribution to the intertwined histories of girlhood, imperialism, and the international Girl Guide movement.

- Kristine Moruzi

Alexander paints a complex image of the organization, which was the epitome of the simultaneously dynamic and traditional nature of British society in the interwar period, and makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the Girl Guides through this thought-provoking transnational study.

- Sian Edwards, University of Winchester

Guiding Modern Girls unveils how the early Girl Guide movement carved out spaces of intergenerational female homosociality that were neither fully empowering nor exclusively oppressive. On a larger scale, it gestures at the untapped potential buried in the history of youth organizations for charting the stony and serpentine trails that led to the emergence of a global modernity.

- Mischa Honeck, Historisches Institut, Universitat Duisburg-Essen