Making and Breaking the Rules
Women in Quebec, 1919-1939
Andrée Lévesque author Yvonne Klein translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:9th Feb '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
During the interwar period, Quebec was a strongly patriarchal society, where men in the Church, politics, and medicine, maintained a traditional norm of social and sexual standards that women were expected to abide by. Some women in the media and religious communities were complicit with this vision, upholding the "ideal" as the norm and tending to those "deviants" who failed to meet society's expectations. By examining the underside of a staid and repressive society, Andrée Lévesque reveals an alternate and more accurate history of women and sexual politics in early twentieth-century Quebec. Women, mainly of the working class, left traces in the historical record of their transgressions from the norm, including the rejection of motherhood (e.g., abortion, abandonment, infanticide), pregnancy and birth outside of marriage, and prostitution. Professor Lévesque concludes, "They were deviant, but only in relation to a norm upheld to stave off a modernism that threatened to swallow up a Quebec based on long-established social and sexual roles."
ISBN: 9781442611382
Dimensions: 204mm x 134mm x 12mm
Weight: 190g
170 pages