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Women of the Commonwealth: Work, Family, and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts
Susan L. Porter
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These essays reflect the complexity and richness of current scholarship in women's history. Informed by a variety of source materials and methodologies, the ten chapters break down a generalized construct of "womanhood" to explore the dynamics between gender, race, ethnicity, and class.The first section of the book focuses on women's work, paid and unpaid, and the effects of class, ethnicity, and gender on the structure of the job market and on power relations within the family. The second section revisits the concept of "sisterhood" by looking at women in relation to their families, social and cultural networks, and civic and private institutions. The editor's introduction sets the essays in the current historiographical context of women's studies and provides a bibliographical essay for the nonspecialist reader.
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Cover Page
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Title Page
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Copyright Page
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Contents
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Foreword
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Introduction
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PART ONE: Women and Work
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Victorian Values in the Marketplace: Single Women and Work in Boston, 1800-1850
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The Feminization of Teaching in Massachusetts: A Reconsideration
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Etre a l'ouvrage ou étre maitresse de maison: French-Canadian Women and Work in Late Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts
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Good Men and “Working Girls”: The Bureau of Statistics of Labor, 1870-1900
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The Gendered Foundations of Social Work Education in Boston, 1904-1930
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PART TWO: Social Reform and Political Activism
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Caroline Healey Dall: Her Creation and Reform Career
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Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin: A Nineteenth-Century Journalist of Boston’s Black Elite Class
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Julia Harrington Duff and the Political Awakening of Irish-American Women in Boston, 1888-1905
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“The Simplest of New England Spinsters”: Becoming Emily Greene Balch, 1867-1961
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Beyond Servants and Salesgirls: Working Women's Education in Boston, 1885-1915
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Contributors
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 1996
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
- 9781685750602 (ebook)