Chapter 11: Pg.20
of the traditional womens rights clamor." If the HulhHouse women
had the vote, they would refrain from using it in mens affairs and confine themselves to womens concerns: "None of these busy women
wished to take the place of men nor to influence them in the direction
of mens affairs, hut they did seek an opportunity to cooperate directly
in civic life through the use of the ballot in regard to their own ah
fairs." The position of Jane Addams within turn-of-the-century feminism is quite complex. On the one hand, she was a highly visible example of a strong, independent woman carrying out the complicated
task of administering Hull-House and taking an active role in national
public debate. But on the other hand, the promise that she held out,
both by precept and example, that "liberated women" would remain
within their traditional roles of sacrificial caretakers of others must
have provided considerable comfort to traditionalists and contributed
to her public idealization as "Saint Jane."
The permanent value of Twenty Years at Hull-House does not lie in
the persuasiveness of Addamss ideas but in its discursiveness, the opportunity it provides to listen to the voice of an extraordinary person
engaged in a daring and provocative experiment, weighing and considering its meaning. At the heart of Twenty Years at Hull-House is not
an idea but a gesture, the act of moving into a slum neighborhood resolved to be a "good neighbor." This ambiguous act can be seen as a
conservative move to preserve the system by softening its harsher
effects from within or as a way of validating and reinforcing narrow and limiting conceptions of female service. But it also can be seen as
an act of genuine goodness, an attempt to rescue women from positions of genteel passivity, and a courageous call for America to address
the condition of the urban poor, so egregious a reproach to American
democracy. None of these possibilities is lost on Jane Addams, and as
long as they remain live issues—as they are even after a hundred years
at Hull-House—Twenty Years at Hull-House will continue to find fascinated readers.
This edition reproduces some of the beautiful line drawings contributed to the first edition by Norah Hamilton, drawings that exemplify
the handcraftsmanship Jane Addams celebrates in the text. Norah
Hamilton (1873-1945) was a resident of Hull-House. Her older sister
Edith Hamilton was headmistress of Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore
in 1910; she later won fame for her popular treatments of classical cul