Duke University Press
Breadwinners and Citizens: Gender in the Making of the French Social Model
Breadwinners and Citizens: Gender in the Making of the French Social Model
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Frader's analysis moves between the everyday lives of ordinary working women and men and the actions of national policymakers, political parties, and political movements, including feminists, pro-natalists, and trade unionists. In the years following World War I, the many women and an increasing number of immigrant men in the labor force competed for employment and pay. Family policy was used not only to encourage reproduction but also to regulate wages and the size of the workforce. Policies to promote married women's and immigrants' departure from the labor force were more common when jobs were scarce, as they were during the Depression. Frader contends that gender and ethnicity exerted a powerful and unacknowledged influence on French social policy during the Depression era and for decades afterward.
Author: Laura Levine Frader
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 03/28/2008
Pages: 360
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.08lbs
Size: 9.19h x 6.35w x 0.82d
ISBN: 9780822341987
Review Citation(s):
Choice 04/01/2009
About the Author
Laura Levine Frader is Professor of History and Chair of the History Department at Northeastern University. She is the author of The Industrial Revolution and Peasants and Protest: Agricultural Workers, Politics, and Unions in the Aude, 1850-1914. She is a coeditor of Gender and Class in Modern Europe and of Race in France: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Politics of Difference.
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