Bringing together Jane Addams' most influential writings alongside a nuanced examination of her methods and ideas, this book reveals a philosopher of remarkable creativity, rigor, and moral commitment.
Rooted in the tradition of American pragmatism, Addams' work emerges here as both historically significant and urgently relevant - speaking directly to contemporary questions of intersectional feminist ethics, democratic participation, and social justice. The opening chapters foreground Addams' published work, tracing her pivotal role in shaping pragmatic thought in the United States, and highlighting how she anchored her inquiries into social morality and women's collective memory in the lived realities of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Building on this foundation, the book broadens its focus to explore the wider range of philosophies and practices Addams developed across her life in response to concrete social injustices. Many of these injustices - structural inequality, political exclusion, gendered labor, and community fragmentation - remain pressing concerns today. By revisiting Addams' diagnoses of these problems and her imaginative proposals for inclusive, participatory approaches to social reform, this book demonstrates the enduring vitality of her thought.