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Conclusion. Can We Construct a Holistic Approach to Women’s Labor History over the Longue Durée?
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Laura Lee Downs
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- List of Figures and Tables vii
- Introduction. What Is Work? Gender at the Crossroads of Home, Family, and Business from the Early Modern Era to the Present 1
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I. SETTING THE SCENE: THE FEMINIST CHALLENGES TO THE “DELABORIZATION” OF HOUSEHOLD WORK
- Introduction 85
- 1 Family Work: A Policy-Relevant Intellectual History 89
- 2 Productive and Reproductive Work: Uses and Abuses of an Old Dichotomy 114
- 3 The Home as a Factory: Rethinking the Debate on Housewives’ Wages in Italy, 1929–1980 139
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II. THE CUNNING HISTORIAN: UNVEILING AND OVERCOMING THE GENDER BIAS OF SOURCES
- Introduction 161
- 4 The Statistical Construction of Women’s Work and the Male Breadwinner Economy in Spain (1856–1930) 165
- 5 Toiling Women, Non-working Housewives, and Lesser Citizens: Statistical and Legal Constructions of Female Work and Citizenship in Italy 188
- 6 The Complexities of Work: Analyzing Men’s and Women’s Work in the Early Modern World with the Verb-Oriented Method 226
- 7 The Visibility of Women’s Work: Logics and Contexts of Documents’ Production 243
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III. THE VALUE OF CARE AND UNPAID HOME-BASED WORK: THE ROLE OF THE LAW
- Introduction 265
- 8 Regulating Home Labors: The ILO and the Feminization of Work 269
- 9 Family-Relations Law between “Stratification” and “Resistance”: Housework and Family Law Exceptionalism 295
- 10 Could Family (Care) Work Be Paid? From French Agricultural Inheritance Law (1939) to Legal Recognition of Excessive Filial Duty (1994) 326
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IV. CONCLUSION
- Conclusion. Can We Construct a Holistic Approach to Women’s Labor History over the Longue Durée? 349
- Index 368
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- List of Figures and Tables vii
- Introduction. What Is Work? Gender at the Crossroads of Home, Family, and Business from the Early Modern Era to the Present 1
-
I. SETTING THE SCENE: THE FEMINIST CHALLENGES TO THE “DELABORIZATION” OF HOUSEHOLD WORK
- Introduction 85
- 1 Family Work: A Policy-Relevant Intellectual History 89
- 2 Productive and Reproductive Work: Uses and Abuses of an Old Dichotomy 114
- 3 The Home as a Factory: Rethinking the Debate on Housewives’ Wages in Italy, 1929–1980 139
-
II. THE CUNNING HISTORIAN: UNVEILING AND OVERCOMING THE GENDER BIAS OF SOURCES
- Introduction 161
- 4 The Statistical Construction of Women’s Work and the Male Breadwinner Economy in Spain (1856–1930) 165
- 5 Toiling Women, Non-working Housewives, and Lesser Citizens: Statistical and Legal Constructions of Female Work and Citizenship in Italy 188
- 6 The Complexities of Work: Analyzing Men’s and Women’s Work in the Early Modern World with the Verb-Oriented Method 226
- 7 The Visibility of Women’s Work: Logics and Contexts of Documents’ Production 243
-
III. THE VALUE OF CARE AND UNPAID HOME-BASED WORK: THE ROLE OF THE LAW
- Introduction 265
- 8 Regulating Home Labors: The ILO and the Feminization of Work 269
- 9 Family-Relations Law between “Stratification” and “Resistance”: Housework and Family Law Exceptionalism 295
- 10 Could Family (Care) Work Be Paid? From French Agricultural Inheritance Law (1939) to Legal Recognition of Excessive Filial Duty (1994) 326
-
IV. CONCLUSION
- Conclusion. Can We Construct a Holistic Approach to Women’s Labor History over the Longue Durée? 349
- Index 368