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Laura Levine Frader's synthesis of labor history and gender history brings to the fore failures in realizing the French social model of equality for all citizens. Challenging previous scholarship, she argues that the male breadwinner ideal was stronger in France in the interwar years than scholars have typically recognized, and that it had negative consequences for women's claims to the full benefits of citizenship. She describes how ideas about masculinity, femininity, family, and work affected post-World War I reconstruction, policies designed to address France's postwar population deficit, and efforts to redefine citizenship in the 1920s and 1930s. She demonstrates that gender divisions and the male breadwinner ideal were reaffirmed through the policies and practices of labor, management, and government. The social model that France implemented in the 1920s and 1930s incorporated fundamental social inequalities.Frader's analysis moves between the everyday lives of ordinary working women and men and the actions of national policymakers, political parties, and political movements, including feminists, pro-natalists, and trade unionists. In the years following World War I, the many women and an increasing number of immigrant men in the labor force competed for employment and pay. Family policy was used not only to encourage reproduction but also to regulate wages and the size of the workforce. Policies to promote married women's and immigrants' departure from the labor force were more common when jobs were scarce, as they were during the Depression. Frader contends that gender and ethnicity exerted a powerful and unacknowledged influence on French social policy during the Depression era and for decades afterward.
In the first decade of the twentieth century, the sleepy vineyard
towns of the Aude department of southern France exploded with
strikes and protests. Agricultural workers joined labor unions, the
Socialist party established a base among peasant vinegrowers, and
the largest peasant uprising of twentieth-century France, the great
vinegrowers' revolt of 1907, shook the entire south with massive
demonstrations. In this study, Laura Levine Frader explains how
left-wing politics and labor radicalism in the Aude emerged from
the economic and social transformation of rural society between
1850 and 1914. She describes the formation of an agricultural
wage-earning class, and discusses how socialism and a revolutionary
syndicalist labor movement together forged working-class
identity.
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