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Putting the Barn Before the House - Women and Family Farming in Early Twentieth-Century New York (Paperback, New): Nancy Grey... Putting the Barn Before the House - Women and Family Farming in Early Twentieth-Century New York (Paperback, New)
Nancy Grey Osterud
R837 Discovery Miles 8 370 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Putting the Barn Before the House features the voices and viewpoints of women born before World War I who lived on family farms in south-central New York. As she did in her previous book, Bonds of Community, for an earlier period in history, Grey Osterud explores the flexible and varied ways that families shared labor and highlights the strategies of mutuality that women adopted to ensure they had a say in family decision making. Sharing and exchanging work also linked neighboring households and knit the community together. Indeed, the culture of cooperation that women espoused laid the basis for the formation of cooperatives that enabled these dairy farmers to contest the power of agribusiness and obtain better returns for their labor. Osterud recounts this story through the words of the women and men who lived it and carefully explores their views about gender, labor, and power, which offered an alternative to the ideas that prevailed in American society.Most women saw "putting the barn before the house" investing capital and labor in productive operations rather than spending money on consumer goods or devoting time to mere housework as a necessary and rational course for families who were determined to make a living on the land and, if possible, to pass on viable farms to the next generation. Some women preferred working outdoors to what seemed to them the thankless tasks of urban housewives, while others worked off the farm to support the family. Husbands and wives, as well as parents and children, debated what was best and negotiated over how to allocate their limited labor and capital and plan for an uncertain future. Osterud tells the story of an agricultural community in transition amid an industrializing age with care and skill."

Putting the Barn Before the House - Women and Family Farming in Early Twentieth-Century New York (Hardcover, New): Nancy Grey... Putting the Barn Before the House - Women and Family Farming in Early Twentieth-Century New York (Hardcover, New)
Nancy Grey Osterud
R3,775 Discovery Miles 37 750 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Putting the Barn Before the House features the voices and viewpoints of women born before World War I who lived on family farms in south-central New York. As she did in her previous book, Bonds of Community, for an earlier period in history, Grey Osterud explores the flexible and varied ways that families shared labor and highlights the strategies of mutuality that women adopted to ensure they had a say in family decision making. Sharing and exchanging work also linked neighboring households and knit the community together. Indeed, the culture of cooperation that women espoused laid the basis for the formation of cooperatives that enabled these dairy farmers to contest the power of agribusiness and obtain better returns for their labor. Osterud recounts this story through the words of the women and men who lived it and carefully explores their views about gender, labor, and power, which offered an alternative to the ideas that prevailed in American society.Most women saw "putting the barn before the house" investing capital and labor in productive operations rather than spending money on consumer goods or devoting time to mere housework as a necessary and rational course for families who were determined to make a living on the land and, if possible, to pass on viable farms to the next generation. Some women preferred working outdoors to what seemed to them the thankless tasks of urban housewives, while others worked off the farm to support the family. Husbands and wives, as well as parents and children, debated what was best and negotiated over how to allocate their limited labor and capital and plan for an uncertain future. Osterud tells the story of an agricultural community in transition amid an industrializing age with care and skill."

Bonds of Community - The Lives of Farm Women in Nineteenth-Century New York (Hardcover): Nancy Grey Osterud Bonds of Community - The Lives of Farm Women in Nineteenth-Century New York (Hardcover)
Nancy Grey Osterud
R3,834 Discovery Miles 38 340 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Bonds of Community - The Lives of Farm Women in Nineteenth-Century New York (Paperback): Nancy Grey Osterud Bonds of Community - The Lives of Farm Women in Nineteenth-Century New York (Paperback)
Nancy Grey Osterud
R1,105 Discovery Miles 11 050 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Women held a central place in long-settled rural communities like the Nanticoke Valley in upstate New York during the late nineteenth century. Their lives were limited by the bonds of kinship and labor, but farm women found strength in these bonds as well. Although they lacked control over land and were second-class citizens, these rural women did not occupy a "separate sphere." Individually and collectively, they responded to inequality by actively enlarging the dimensions of sharing in their relationships with men. Nancy Grey Osterud uses a rich store of diaries, letters, and other first-person documents, in addition to public and organizational records, to reconstruct the everyday lives of ordinary women of the past. Exploring large questions within the confines of a single community, she analyzes the ways in which notions of gender structured women's interactions with their families and neighbors, their place in the farm family economy, and their participation in organized community activities. Rare turn-of-the-century photographs of the rural landscape, formal and informal family portraits, and scenes of daily life and labor add a special dimension to Bonds of Community. It should find a ready audience among women's historians, labor historians, rural historians, and historians of New York State.

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