A Female Economy
Women's Work in a Prairie Province, 1870-1970
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Published:23rd Jun '99
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A comprehensive overview of women's place in the work force over a century
Analyses a hundred years of women's work in Manitoba from the province's entry into Confederation in 1870 to the publication of the "Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in 1970".Kinnear details how ordinary women - including early pioneers, East European immigrants, Native women, and professional women - lived and what they thought of the world of work, often telling their stories in their own words. She highlights the cultural and economic expectations for women and juxtaposes the activities society deemed suitable for women with what they actually did. Kinnear argues that a host of factors, such as class and ethnicity, differentiated their choices but that these women shared many common experiences. While women's own views furnish the main theme, A Female Economy contributes to a developing debate in feminist economics. By focusing on women's experiences in the sexually segregated economy of a Canadian province at the geographic centre of Canada, Kinnear furnishes a paradigm for women's economic activity in most western industrializing societies at the time.
"A Female Economy makes an original contribution to scholarship in women's history and stands as a complement - and in many ways a corrective - to the available provincial histories of Manitoba." Sarah Carter, Department of History, University of Calgary
ISBN: 9780773517356
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
232 pages