Mothers of a new world : maternalist politics and the origins of welfare states

Bibliographic Information

Mothers of a new world : maternalist politics and the origins of welfare states

edited by Seth Koven & Sonya Michel

Routledge, 1993

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 49 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hbk ISBN 9780415903134

Description

In "Mothers of a New World", historians of Australia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Sweden, and the United States provide a sweeping view of the scope of women's work and make comparisons across societies and over time. The essays analyze tensions between reformers and clients arising from differences of class, race, ethnicity, and religion. Moving to the level of state politics, they examine the outcomes of maternalist initiatives within specific political contexts including conservative and social democratic regimes; limited, decentralized, and strong centralized states; and highly religious and secular cultures. Though the maternalists' "motherworld" was never fully realized, their vision helped shape modern welfare states throughout the West. This collection aims to encourage readers to revise their accounts of welfare state development by moving issues of gender and the work of female reformers from the margins to the centre.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780415903141

Description

Historians of Australia, Germany, Great Britain, Sweden and the United States provide a sweeping view of the scope of women's work and make comparisons across societies and over time.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: "Mother Worlds", Seth Koven, Sonya Michel
  • Chapter 1 The Historical Foundations of Women's Power in the Creation of the American Welfare State, 1830-1930, Kathryn Kish Sklar
  • Chapter 2 Borderlands: Women, Voluntary Action, and Child Welfare in Britain, 1840 to 1914, Seth Koven
  • Chapter 3 Social Mothers: The Bourgeois Women's Movement and German Welfare-State Formation, 1890-1929, Christoph Sachsse
  • Chapter 4 Woman's Work and the Early Welfare State in Germany: Legislators, Bureaucrats, and Clients before the First World War, Jean H. Quataert
  • Chapter 5 Depopulation and Race Suicide: Maternalism and Pronatalist Ideologies in France and the United States, Alisa Klaus
  • Chapter 6 The Power of Motherhood: Black and White Activist Women Redefine the "Political", Eileen Boris
  • Chapter 7 Catholicism, Feminism, and the Politics of the Family during the late Third Republic, Susan Pedersen
  • Chapter 8 The Limits of Maternalism: Policies Toward American Wage-Earning Mothers During the Progressive Era, Sonya Michel
  • Chapter 9 "My Work Came Out of Agony and Grief": Mothers and the Making of the Sheppard-Towner Act, Molly Ladd-Taylor
  • Chapter 10 Women in the British Labour Part y and the Construction of State Welfare, 1906-1939, Pat Thane
  • Chapter 11 A Revolution in the Family: The Challenge and Contradictions of Maternal Citizenship in Australia, Marilyn Lake
  • Chapter 12 Feminist Strategies and Gendered Discourses in Welfare States: Married Women's Right to Work in the United States and Sweden, Barbara Hobson

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