Cultivating Music in America

  Acknowledgments

 expand sectionIntroduction:  Music Patronage As a "Female-Centered Cultural Process"
 expand sectionOne—  Patronage—and Women—in America's Musical Life:  An Overview of a Changing Scene
 expand sectionTwo—  Women As "Keepers of Culture":  Music Clubs, Community Concert Series, and Symphony Orchestras
 expand sectionThree—  Living with Music:  Isabella Stewart Gardner
 expand sectionFour—  Jeannette Meyer Thurber (1850–1946):  Music for a Democracy
  Five—  Laura Langford and the Seidl Society:  Wagner Comes to Brooklyn
 expand sectionSix—  A Style of Her Own:  The Patronage of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge
 expand sectionSeven—  "As Large As She Can Make It":  The Role of Black Women Activists in Music, 1880–1945
 collapse sectionEight—  Women Patrons and Crusaders for Modernist Music:  New York in the 1920s
 Women As Patrons
 Volunteering for the Cause
 The Critical Response
 Vignette I—  The Power of Social Events:  Aaron Copland's Guest List for a Post-Concert Reception Given by Blanche Walton
 expand sectionNine—  Culture, Feminism, and the Sacred:  Sophie Drinker's Musical Activism
 expand sectionTen—  Reflections on Art Music in America, on Stereotypes of the Woman Patron, and on Cha(lle)nges in the Present and Future

 expand sectionNotes
  Contributors
 expand sectionIndex

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