| Cultivating Music in America |
| Acknowledgments |
| Introduction: Music Patronage As a "Female-Centered Cultural Process" |
| One— Patronage—and Women—in America's Musical Life: An Overview of a Changing Scene |
| Two— Women As "Keepers of Culture": Music Clubs, Community Concert Series, and Symphony Orchestras |
| Three— Living with Music: Isabella Stewart Gardner |
| Four— Jeannette Meyer Thurber (1850–1946): Music for a Democracy |
| Five— Laura Langford and the Seidl Society: Wagner Comes to Brooklyn |
| Six— A Style of Her Own: The Patronage of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge |
| Seven— "As Large As She Can Make It": The Role of Black Women Activists in Music, 1880–1945 |
| Eight— Women Patrons and Crusaders for Modernist Music: New York in the 1920s |
| Nine— Culture, Feminism, and the Sacred: Sophie Drinker's Musical Activism |
| Ten— Reflections on Art Music in America, on Stereotypes of the Woman Patron, and on Cha(lle)nges in the Present and Future |
| Notes |
| Contributors |
| Index |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |