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Utopian Genderscapes - Rhetorics of Women's Work in the Early Industrial Age (Paperback)
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Utopian Genderscapes - Rhetorics of Women's Work in the Early Industrial Age (Paperback)
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A necessary rhetorical history of women's work in utopian
communities. Utopian Genderscapes focuses on three prominent yet
understudied intentional communities-Brook Farm, Harmony Society,
and the Oneida Community-who in response to industrialization
experimented with radical social reform in the antebellum United
States. Foremost among the avenues of reform was the place and
substance of women's work. Author Michelle C. Smith seeks in the
communities' rhetorics of teleology, choice, and exceptionalism the
lived consequences of the communities' lofty goals for women
members. This feminist history captures the utopian reconfiguration
of women's bodies, spaces, objects, and discourses and delivers a
needed intervention into how rhetorical gendering interacts with
other race and class identities. The attention to each community's
material practices reveals a gendered ecology, which in many ways
squared unevenly with utopian claims. Nevertheless, this volume
argues that this utopian moment inaugurated many of the norms and
practices of labor that continue to structure women's lives and
opportunities today: the rise of the factory, the shift of labor
from home spaces to workplaces, the invention of housework, the
role of birth control and childcare, the question of wages, and the
feminization of particular kinds of labor. An impressive and
diverse array of archival and material research grounds each
chapter's examination of women's professional, domestic, or
reproductive labor in a particular community. Fleeting though they
may seem, the practices and lives of those intentional women, Smith
argues, pattern contemporary divisions of work along the vibrant
and contentious lines of gender, race, and class and stage the
continued search for what is possible.
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