Women and business since 1500 : invisible presences in Europe and North America?
著者
書誌事項
Women and business since 1500 : invisible presences in Europe and North America?
(Gender and history)(Macmillan education)
Palgrave Macmillan, 2016
- : hardback
- : paperback
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全2件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: paperback ISBN 9781137033222
内容説明
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.
目次
Introduction
PART I: THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD (16TH TO 18TH CENTURY)
1.Context
2.Common People: the Crafts
3.Common People - Retailers, Street Sellers, Market Stall Holders, Shopkeepers
4.Interregional and International Trade and Banking
5.Printers and Manufacturers
6.The North American (British and French) Colonies
Conclusion to Part One
PART II: THE MODERN PERIOD (19TH TO 21ST CENTURY)
7.Context
8.More of the Same: Lower Middle Class Women in the English Speaking World
9.Women and Small Business in Continental Europe
10.Women and Large Businesses: Successors and Heiresses
11.Women and Large Businesses: Creators and Co-creators
12.Female Investors and Bankers - 17th to 19th Century
13.Post 1960 Entrepreneurship. A New (American) Female Frontier?
Conclusion to Part Two
General Conclusion.
- 巻冊次
-
: hardback ISBN 9781137033239
内容説明
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.
目次
Introduction
PART I: THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD (16TH TO 18TH CENTURY)
1.Context
2.Common People: the Crafts
3.Common People – Retailers, Street Sellers, Market Stall Holders, Shopkeepers
4.Interregional and International Trade and Banking
5.Printers and Manufacturers
6.The North American (British and French) Colonies
Conclusion to Part One
PART II: THE MODERN PERIOD (19TH TO 21ST CENTURY)
7.Context
8.More of the Same: Lower Middle Class Women in the English Speaking World
9.Women and Small Business in Continental Europe
10.Women and Large Businesses: Successors and Heiresses
11.Women and Large Businesses: Creators and Co-creators
12.Female Investors and Bankers – 17th to 19th Century
13.Post 1960 Entrepreneurship. A New (American) Female Frontier?
Conclusion to Part Two
General Conclusion.
「Nielsen BookData」 より