Intrepid girls : the complicated history of the Girl Scouts of the USA / Amy Erdman Farrell.

Author/creator Farrell, Amy Erdman author.
Format Book
PublicationChapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, [2025]
Copyright Date©2025
Descriptionxiv, 300 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Subjects

Contents Girl Scouts of the USA: race, feminism, and American empire -- Origin stories: the myth and memory of Juliette Gordon Low -- Girl Scouting and the intrepid girl -- Girl Scouting and American Indian girls -- The arsenal of democracy: Girl Scouting in an age of empire -- Japanese American incarceration and the myth of international sisterhood -- Girl Scouting and the color line: African American Girl Scouting in the twentieth century -- "Even the Girl Scouts": communism and the seeds of subversion in the Girl Scouts -- From revolution to backlash: Girl Scouting in the late twentieth century -- An active education in forgetting: my 1975 pilgrimage to the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace and the Girl Scout Plantation -- Girl Scouting in the twenty-first century -- A dangerous innocence.
Abstract "When eight-year-old Amy Erdman Farrell moved with her family to Akron, Ohio, in 1972, she found herself adrift in a sea of taunting boys and mean girls. Shy by nature, she dreaded her long, unhappy days at school. But a few years later, Farrell found an escape from bullying, the promise of sisterhood, a rising sense of confidence, adventure, and - best of all - lifelong friendship when she joined a Girl Scout troop. Decades later, award-winning author Farrell returns to those formative experiences to explore the complicated and surprising history of the Girl Scouts of the USA. Drawing from extensive archival research, visits to iconic Girl Scout sites around the world, and vivid personal reflections, Farrell uncovers the Girl Scouts intricate history, revealing how the organization has shaped the lives of more than 50 million girls and women since its founding in 1912. With Farrell as our own intrepid guide, we travel to American Indian boarding schools, Japanese American incarceration centers, segregated African American communities, middle-class white neighborhoods, and outposts throughout the globe. Intrepid Girls unpacks how the Girl Scouts navigated tensions over feminism, race, class, and political differences, carving out extraordinary opportunities for girls and women - even as it participated in the very discrimination it promised to transcend. For anyone who has ever worn a uniform or wondered about the hidden history behind this iconic American institution, Intrepid Girls will surprise, inspire, and challenge what we think we know about the Girl Scouts"-- Provided by publisher.
General note"A Ferris and Ferris Book."
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
LCCN 2025015473
ISBN9781469686837 hardcover
ISBN146968683X hardcover
ISBNelectronic book
ISBNelectronic book
ISBNelectronic book
ISBNelectronic book

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner New Books HS3359 .F37 2025 ✔ Available Want This?