A fascinating and evocative account of the rise to prominence of Mary Mills Patrick as president of the American College for Girls in Istanbul during the twilight of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of the Turkish Republic. Deftly negotiating the complex terrain of this period of global upheaval, Golfman tracks the remarkable story of Patrick and her dedication to the education of women and devotion to the College. Charting Patrick’s shifting allegiances, from American missionary work to feminist cosmopolitanism to Turkish nationalism, Golfman offers a compelling and intimate history of this tumultuous period that witnessed a cholera epidemic, the Armenian genocide, and the Great War and its aftermath.
— Catherine Heffernan
A fascinating and evocative account of the rise to prominence of Mary Mills Patrick as president of the American College for Girls in Istanbul during the twilight of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of the Turkish Republic. Deftly negotiating the complex terrain of this period of global upheaval, Goffman tracks the remarkable story of Patrick and her dedication to the education of women and devotion to the College. Charting Patrick’s shifting allegiances, from American missionary work to feminist cosmopolitanism to Turkish nationalism, Goffman offers a compelling and intimate history of this tumultuous period that witnessed a cholera epidemic, the Armenian genocide, and the Great War and its aftermath.
— Teresa Heffernan, St. Mary's University
Carolyn Goffman renders legible to a contemporary reader the complex religious, ethnic, and national politics of the late Ottoman period to produce a nuanced and accessible account of Mary Mills Patrick's transition from "missionary to feminist educator." Educating and socializing cadres of Ottoman women from diverse communities, Patrick's legacy shaped the cosmopolitanism of regional and international modernities and influenced feminist, anti-colonial, and nationalist agendas.
— Reina Lewis, University of the Arts London
Missionaries in the Middle East have always been a controversial subject. This book by Carolyn Goffman makes a very important contribution to this sensitive topic. Through the life and work of Mary Mills Patrick, an American missionary who lived through the tumultuous last years of the Ottoman Empire and the first years of the Republic of Turkey, we are treated to an insider’s view of how an American feminist educator and intellectual survived and indeed thrived largely through her wit and intelligence.
Goffman paints a vivid picture that makes for fascinating reading proving that a scholarly book can indeed be a good read as well.
— Selim Deringil, Lebanese American University
A sophisticated, engaging and beautifully crafted analysis of Mary Mills Patrick's career and the cause to which Patrick devoted her life. Goffman has captured the ever-changing political landscapes that Patrick inhabited and the events that shaped her and the college she cherished. In this fascinating story of a life lived between worlds, the author dissects her subject's writings to show how Patrick wove her own biography into the history of the college, producing conflicting historical narratives over time not only to protect the institution but also to safeguard her place in its history.
— Barbara Reeves-Ellington, author of Domestic Frontiers: Gender, Reform, and American Interventions in the Ottoman Balkans and the Near East