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Women Adrift: Independent Wage Earners in Chicago 1880-1930
Paperback

Women Adrift: Independent Wage Earners in Chicago 1880-1930

$150.99
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Starting with Dreiser’s Sister Carrie, Meyerowitz uses turn-of-the-century Chicago as a case study to explore both the image and the reality of single women’s experiences as they lived apart from their families. In an era when family all but defined American womanhood, these women–neither victimized nor liberated–created new social ties and subcultures to cope with the conditions of urban life.
Brilliant… . Gracefully written, and mercifully free from the jargon that often plagues social history, this book is a welcome addition to literature in women’s, urban, and black history. –Ann Schofield,
American Historical Review
Meyerowitz provides a splendid portrait of her subjects… . She deserves praise for her demographic spadework, sensitive analysis, and engaging style. This is a valuable and rewarding book. –Nancy Woloch, Journal of American History

A state-of-the-art product of the new women’s history… . Meyerowitz’s work is an extremely useful contribution, a corrective to over-concentration on women in family, an opening to new ways of looking at single women. –Linda Gordon, Women’s Review of Books

Women Adrift not only brings together many of the most exciting insights of women’s history in recent years, but Meyerowitz’s particular angle on issues of work, family, sexuality, mass culture and relationships among women also encourages us to rethink these insights. –Ileen A. DeVault, Historian

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
1 January 1991
Pages
248
ISBN
9780226521985

Starting with Dreiser’s Sister Carrie, Meyerowitz uses turn-of-the-century Chicago as a case study to explore both the image and the reality of single women’s experiences as they lived apart from their families. In an era when family all but defined American womanhood, these women–neither victimized nor liberated–created new social ties and subcultures to cope with the conditions of urban life.
Brilliant… . Gracefully written, and mercifully free from the jargon that often plagues social history, this book is a welcome addition to literature in women’s, urban, and black history. –Ann Schofield,
American Historical Review
Meyerowitz provides a splendid portrait of her subjects… . She deserves praise for her demographic spadework, sensitive analysis, and engaging style. This is a valuable and rewarding book. –Nancy Woloch, Journal of American History

A state-of-the-art product of the new women’s history… . Meyerowitz’s work is an extremely useful contribution, a corrective to over-concentration on women in family, an opening to new ways of looking at single women. –Linda Gordon, Women’s Review of Books

Women Adrift not only brings together many of the most exciting insights of women’s history in recent years, but Meyerowitz’s particular angle on issues of work, family, sexuality, mass culture and relationships among women also encourages us to rethink these insights. –Ileen A. DeVault, Historian

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
1 January 1991
Pages
248
ISBN
9780226521985