In search of the new woman : middle-class women and work in Britain, 1870-1914 /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Sutherland, Gillian, author.
Imprint:Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Description:xi, 187 pages ; 24 cm
Language:English
Subject:Women -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 19th century.
Women -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
Middle class women -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 19th century.
Middle class women -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
Women employees -- Great Britain -- History -- 19th century.
Women employees -- Great Britain -- History -- 20th century.
Women white collar workers -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 19th century.
Women white collar workers -- Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain.
Middle class women -- Social conditions.
Social conditions.
Women employees.
Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 19th century.
Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
Great Britain.
History.
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10144857
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781107092792 (hardback)
1107092795 (hardback)
9781107467347 (paperback)
1107467349 (paperback)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"The 'New Women' of late nineteenth-century Britain were seen as defying society's conventions. Studying this phenomenon from its origins in the 1870s to the outbreak of the Great War, Gillian Sutherland examines whether women really had the economic freedom to challenge norms relating to work, political action, love and marriage, and surveys literary and pictorial representations of the New Woman. She considers the proportion of middle-class women who were in employment and the work they did, and compares the different experiences of women who went to Oxbridge and those who went to other universities. Juxtaposing them against the period's rapidly expanding but seldom studied groups of women white-collar workers, the book pays particular attention to clerks and teachers and their political engagement. It also explores the dividing lines between ladies and women, the significance of respectability and the interactions of class, status and gender lying behind such distinctions"--
"The 'New Women' of late nineteenth-century Britain were seen as defying society's conventions. Studying this phenomenon from its origins in the 1870s to the outbreak of the Great War, Gillian Sutherland examines whether women really had the economic freedom to challenge norms relating to work, political action, love and marriage, and surveys literary and pictorial representations of the New Woman. "--

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Call Number: HQ1593.S923 2015
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