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Imagine becoming the most admired woman in America, winning a Nobel Peace Prize, and then being booed off the stage at Carnegie Hall, expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution, and branded a traitor in the national press. That whiplash is the real story of Jane Addams, usually flattened into the dusty "mother of social work" but actually a radical pragmatist who moved into the slums of 19th-century Chicago to fight poverty face to face.
This episode follows the privileged, sickly childhood and the breakdown that closed the door on medicine, the moral crisis at a Madrid bullfight, and the London settlement house that rewired her thinking. It traces how Hull House grew from one decaying mansion into a complex serving 2,000 people a week, treated like a responsive organism that built nurseries and bathhouses as the neighborhood needed them, and it doesn't flinch from the uncomfortable contradiction of her later embrace of eugenics.
By pplpodImagine becoming the most admired woman in America, winning a Nobel Peace Prize, and then being booed off the stage at Carnegie Hall, expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution, and branded a traitor in the national press. That whiplash is the real story of Jane Addams, usually flattened into the dusty "mother of social work" but actually a radical pragmatist who moved into the slums of 19th-century Chicago to fight poverty face to face.
This episode follows the privileged, sickly childhood and the breakdown that closed the door on medicine, the moral crisis at a Madrid bullfight, and the London settlement house that rewired her thinking. It traces how Hull House grew from one decaying mansion into a complex serving 2,000 people a week, treated like a responsive organism that built nurseries and bathhouses as the neighborhood needed them, and it doesn't flinch from the uncomfortable contradiction of her later embrace of eugenics.