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Looking at women, business and finance in the long nineteenth
century, this book challenges our traditional understanding of
'separate spheres'--whereby men operated in the public world of
work and women in the private realm of the domestic. Drawing on
case studies throughout Europe, the authors reveal that there was
much greater diversity in women's economic experience across all
social strata than has previously been understood. International
contributors take a new look at women's roles in finance and
investment, family-owned businesses, retailing, service activities,
and the artisanal trades. They reveal that elite and middle-class
women often manipulated financial resources in a highly
sophisticated manner. Family-owned businesses and retail trade
geared to women, such as grocery and fashion, also offered women
opportunities. Throughout, the authors consider the impact of
industrialization on women's economic agency. We learn about women
in the accommodation business in London, female entrepreneurs in
Italy, prostitutes in Germany, family businesses in Sweden, women
in publishing in Spain and much more.
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, a local
economy made up of settlers, loggers, and business people from
Lower Canada, New Brunswick, and New England was established on the
banks of the Upper St. John River in an area known as the Madawaska
Territory. This newly created economy was visibly part of the
Atlantic capitalist system yet different in several major ways. In
Backwoods Consumers and Homespun Capitalists, B atrice Craig
examines and describes this economy from its origins in the native
fur trade, the growth of exportable wheat, the selling of food to
new settlers, and of ton timbre to Britain. Craig vividly portrays
the role of wives who sold homespun fabric and clothing to farmers,
loggers, and river drivers, helping to bolster the community. The
construction of saw, grist, and carding mills, and the
establishment of stores, boarding houses, and taverns are all
viewed as steps in the development of what the author calls
"homespun capitalists." The territory also participated in the
Atlantic economy as a consumer of Canadian, British, European, west
and east Indian and American goods. This case study offers a unique
examination of the emergence of capitalism and of a consumer
society in a small, relatively remote community in the backwoods of
New Brunswick.
This volume explores the role of women in business in
nineteenth-century Northern French textile centers. Lille and the
surrounding towns were then dominated by big and small family
businesses, and many were run by women. Those women did not
withdraw into the parlour as the century progressed and the
'separate ideology' spread. Neither did they become mere figure
heads - most were business persons in their own rights. Yet, they
have left almost no traces in the collective memory, and historians
assume they ceased to exist. This book therefore seeks to answer
three interrelated questions: How common were those women, and what
kind of business did they run? What factors facilitated or impeded
their activities? And finally, why have they been forgotten, and
why has their representations in regional and academic history been
so at odd with reality? Indirectly, this study also sheds light on
the process of industrialization in this region, and on
industrialists' strategies.
This volume surveys the role women have played in various types of
business as owners, co-owners and decision-making managers in
European and North American societies since the sixteenth century.
Drawing on up-to-date scholarship, it identifies the economic,
social, legal and cultural factors that have facilitated or
restricted women's participation in business. It pays particular
attention to the ways in which gender norms, and their evolution,
shaped not only those women's experience of business, but the ways
they were perceived by contemporaries, documented in sources and,
partly as a consequence, viewed by historians.
Looking at women, business and finance in the long nineteenth
century, this book challenges our traditional understanding of
'separate spheres'--whereby men operated in the public world of
work and women in the private realm of the domestic. Drawing on
case studies throughout Europe, the authors reveal that there was
much greater diversity in women's economic experience across all
social strata than has previously been understood.International
contributors take a new look at women's roles in finance and
investment, family-owned businesses, retailing, service activities,
and the artisanal trades. They reveal that elite and middle-class
women often manipulated financial resources in a highly
sophisticated manner. Family-owned businesses and retail trade
geared to women, such as grocery and fashion, also offered women
opportunities. Throughout, the authors consider the impact of
industrialization on women's economic agency. We learn about women
in the accommodation business in London, female entrepreneurs in
Italy, prostitutes in Germany, family businesses in Sweden, women
in publishing in Spain and much more.
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