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Convent Class Struggle: Lay Sisters and Choir Sisters in America
Author(s) -
E. Brian Titley
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
historical studies in education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1911-9674
pISSN - 0843-5057
DOI - 10.32316/hse-rhe.v32i1.4731
Subject(s) - choir , singing , gender studies , servant , sociology , history , political science , pedagogy , management , economics , computer science , programming language
American Catholic sisterhoods of European origin usually featured a subgroup of servant nuns known as lay or coadjutrix sisters. Generally from poor backgrounds and with limited education, the coadjutrices did most of the physical labour in convents and were excluded from many of the privileges of choir sisters. Obliged to wear distinctive clothing that marked their inferior status, they were segregated from choir sisters during meals and recreation, denied opportunities for self-improvement, and excluded from singing the Divine Office and from governance of the community. Choir sisters, on the other hand, monopolized professional work, such as teaching, had access to higher education, and controlled all the leadership positions in the congregation. This paper examines the often difficult relations between lay and choir sisters and agitation by the former for better treatment and greater equality in the United States in the century prior to the Second Vatican Council.

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