Breadwinners : working women and economic independence, 1865-1920

Author(s)

    • Vapnek, Lara

Bibliographic Information

Breadwinners : working women and economic independence, 1865-1920

Lara Vapnek

(Women in American history)

University of Illinois Press, c2009

  • : cloth

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Lara Vapnek tells the story of American labor feminism from the end of the Civil War through the winning of woman suffrage. During this period, working women in the nation's industrializing cities launched a series of campaigns to gain economic equality and political power. This book shows how working women pursued equality by claiming new identities as citizens and as breadwinners. Analyzing disjunctions between middle-class and working-class women's ideas of independence, Vapnek highlights the agendas for change advanced by leaders such as Jennie Collins, Leonora O'Reilly, and Helen Campbell and organizations such as the National Consumers' League, the Women's Educational and Industrial Union, and the Women's Trade Union League. Locating households as important sites of class conflict, Breadwinners recovers the class and gender politics behind the marginalization of domestic workers from labor reform while documenting the ways in which working-class women raised their voices on their own behalf.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix List of Abbreviations xi Introduction 1 Chapter 1. The Daily Labor of Our Own Hands 11 Chapter 2. Working Girls and White Slaves 34 Chapter 3. Gender, Class, and Consumption 66 Chapter 4. Solving the Servant Problem 102 Chapter 5. Democracy Is Only an Aspiration 129 Notes 165 Index 209 Illustrations follow page 10

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