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Reflecting the salient undercurrents of contemporary researh on
women writers, this volume is an appraisal of the work of the
writer as woman and presents critics' perceptions about how women
writers have dealt with the complexity of changing female visions
in the twentieth century. Each of the thirty-four essays,
contributed by some of today's most distinguished writers, speaks
to the work of a particular twentieth-century woman writer, and
each constitutes a contribution to the scholarly debate. Questions
are raised as to the appropriate posture a critic should adopt, and
whether a critic of women's writing should deal with the work as
the product of a woman's hand, dwelling on the sensibilities of the
female consciousness, or assume that the proper point of departure
remains the artistic and aesthetic norms that have emerged from
generations of male-defined practice.
In this updated edition of a pathbreaking classic, Alice
Kessler-Harris explores the meanings of women's wages in the United
States in the twentieth and twenty first centuries, focusing on
three issues that capture the transformation of women's roles: the
battle over minimum wage for women, which exposes the relationship
between family ideology and workplace demands; the argument
concerning equal pay for equal work, which challenges gendered
patterns of self-esteem and social organization; and the debate
over comparable worth, which seeks to incorporate traditionally
female values into new work and family trajectories. Together,
these topics and social organization; and the debate over
comparable worth, which seeks to incorporate traditionally female
values into new work and family trajectories. Together, these
topics illuminate the many ways in which gendered social roles have
been produced, transmitted, and challenged.
This masterwork of American immigrant literature is set in the
1920s on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and tells the story of
Sara Smolinsky, the youngest daughter of an Orthodox rabbi, who
rebels against her father's rigid conception of Jewish womanhood.
Sarah's struggle towards independence and self-fulfillment
resonates with a passion all can share. Beautifully redesigned page
for page with the previous editions, Bread Givers is an essential
historical work with enduring relevance.
After World War II, states on both sides of the Atlantic enacted
comprehensive social benefits to protect working people and
constrain capitalism. A widely shared consensus specifically linked
social welfare to democratic citizenship, upholding greater
equality as the glue that held nations together. Though the "two
Wests," Europe and the United States, differ in crucial respects,
they share a common history of social rights, democratic
participation, and welfare capitalism. But in a new age of global
inequality, welfare-state retrenchment, and economic austerity, can
capitalism and democracy still coexist? In this book, leading
historians and social scientists rethink the history of social
democracy and the welfare state in the United States and Europe in
light of the global transformations of the economic order.
Separately and together, they ask how changes in the distribution
of wealth reshape the meaning of citizenship in a
post-welfare-state era. They explore how the harsh effects of
austerity and inequality influence democratic participation. In
individual essays as well as interviews with Ira Katznelson and
Frances Fox Piven, contributors from both sides of the Atlantic
explore the fortunes of the welfare state. They discuss distinct
national and international settings, speaking to both local
particularities and transnational and transatlantic exchanges.
Covering a range of topics-the lives of migrant workers, gender and
the family in the design of welfare policies, the fate of the
European Union, and the prospects of social movements-Democracy and
the Welfare State is essential reading on what remains of
twentieth-century social democracy amid the onslaught of
neoliberalism and right-wing populism and where this legacy may yet
lead us.
First published in 1982, this pioneering work traces the transformation of "women's work" into wage labor in the United States, identifying the social, economic, and ideological forces that have shaped our expectations of what women do. Basing her observations upon the personal experience of individual American women set against the backdrop of American society, Alice Kessler-Harris examines the effects of class, ethnic and racial patterns, changing perceptions of wage work for women, and the relationship between wage-earning and family roles. In the 20th Anniversary Edition of this landmark book, the author has updated the original and written a new Afterword.
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Bread Givers (Hardcover)
Anzia Yezierska; Foreword by Alice Kessler-Harris
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R848
R779
Discovery Miles 7 790
Save R69 (8%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This masterwork of American immigrant literature is set in the
1920s on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and tells the story of
Sara Smolinsky, the youngest daughter of an Orthodox rabbi, who
rebels against her father's rigid conception of Jewish womanhood.
Sarah's struggle towards independence and self-fulfillment
resonates with a passion all can share. Beautifully redesigned page
for page with the previous editions, Bread Givers is an essential
historical work with enduring relevance.
A critique of how New Deal laws (and later policies in their spirit) ostensibly written to protect women, actually subjegated them financially in the following generations.
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The Open Cage (Hardcover)
Anzia Yezierska; Edited by Alice Kessler-Harris; Afterword by Louise Levitas Henriksen
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R736
R687
Discovery Miles 6 870
Save R49 (7%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
After World War II, states on both sides of the Atlantic enacted
comprehensive social benefits to protect working people and
constrain capitalism. A widely shared consensus specifically linked
social welfare to democratic citizenship, upholding greater
equality as the glue that held nations together. Though the "two
Wests," Europe and the United States, differ in crucial respects,
they share a common history of social rights, democratic
participation, and welfare capitalism. But in a new age of global
inequality, welfare-state retrenchment, and economic austerity, can
capitalism and democracy still coexist? In this book, leading
historians and social scientists rethink the history of social
democracy and the welfare state in the United States and Europe in
light of the global transformations of the economic order.
Separately and together, they ask how changes in the distribution
of wealth reshape the meaning of citizenship in a
post-welfare-state era. They explore how the harsh effects of
austerity and inequality influence democratic participation. In
individual essays as well as interviews with Ira Katznelson and
Frances Fox Piven, contributors from both sides of the Atlantic
explore the fortunes of the welfare state. They discuss distinct
national and international settings, speaking to both local
particularities and transnational and transatlantic exchanges.
Covering a range of topics-the lives of migrant workers, gender and
the family in the design of welfare policies, the fate of the
European Union, and the prospects of social movements-Democracy and
the Welfare State is essential reading on what remains of
twentieth-century social democracy amid the onslaught of
neoliberalism and right-wing populism and where this legacy may yet
lead us.
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