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    Neither Lady nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South

    Posted By: bayern
    Neither Lady nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South

    Neither Lady nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South
    Publisher: The University of North Carolina | ISBN: 0807827355 | edition 2002 | PDF | 368 pages | 8,59 mb

    Although historians over the past two decades have written extensively on the plantation mistress and the slave woman, they have largely neglected the world of the working woman. Neither Lady nor Slave pushes southern history beyond the plantation to examine the lives and labors of ordinary southern women–white, free black, and Indian. Contributors to this volume illuminate women's involvement in the southern market economy in all its diversity. Thirteen essays explore the working lives of a wide range of women–nuns and prostitutes, iron workers and basket weavers, teachers and domestic servants–in urban and rural settings across the South. By highlighting contrasts between paid and unpaid, officially acknowledged and "invisible" work within the context of cultural attitudes regarding women's proper place in society, the book sheds new light on the ambiguities that marked relations between race, class, and gender in the modernizing South. archive password: gigle.ws

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