1st Edition

The Invisible Woman Aspects of Women's Work in Eighteenth-Century Britain

By Isabelle Baudino, Jacques Carré Copyright 2005
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    Most social historians writing about working women in pre-nineteenth century Britain have tended to concentrate on fairly large groups, such as factory workers or domestic servants, often in an attempt to reach some conclusions regarding their standards of living and social position. Another approach has lead feminist historians to search for underlying causes of women's exploitation through the locus of class and gender. Without ignoring these crucial issues, this volume written by cultural historians takes a slightly different approach, focusing on the status of small, sometimes tiny, groups of women holding marginal positions in the labour market, and often employed on an irregular basis. Women such as housekeepers, nurses, camp followers, governesses, actresses and musicians, to take some of the cases examined in this volume, generally did not have stable, permanent employment. Even female tradesmen often only worked for short periods of their lives. The temporary, unreliable character of such work can be partly related to the changing needs of women at different periods of their lives, but it also has much to do the status of women's work in eighteenth century British society. Providing case-studies of women's work in three different environments - middle and upper class households, male dominated communities and societies and the world of the arts - this collection asks fresh questions about women's aspirations and identity at various levels of society. In comparing and contrasting these varying spheres of female employment, this book throws in sharp relief the contrasting attitude to women's work inside and outside the home, and how the latter was often regarded as having a potentially destabilising and transgressive effect on British society.

    Contents: Introduction, I. Baudino, J. Carré and C. Révauger. Part I Women in the Domestic Sphere: The Birth of a New Profession: The Housekeeper and her Status in the 17th and 18th Centuries, Gilly Lehmann; The Representation of Housework in the 18th-Century Women’s Press, Marie-Claire Rouyer-Daney; Needlework and the rights of women in England at the end of the 18th century, Christine Hivet; Governesses of the Royal Family and the Nobility in Great Britain, 1750-1815, Sophie Loussouarn. Part II Women in Male Strongholds: The Labour and Servitude of Women in the Highlands of Scotland in the 18th century, Marie-Hélène Thévenot-Totems; Women in the army in 18th-century Britain, Guyonne Leduc; Hospital nurses in 18th-century Britain: service without responsibility, Jacques Carré; Claiming their Place in the Corporate Community: Women’s Identity in 18th-Century Towns, Deborah Simonton; Women barred from Masonic ’Work’: a British phenomenon, Cécile Révauger. Part III Women and the Cultural Scene: The Actress and 18th-Century Ideals of Femininity, Séverine Lancia; Women in action: Elizabeth Inchbald, heroines and serving maids in British comedies of the 1780s and 1790s, Angela J. Smallwood; Profession: siren - the ambiguous status of professional women musicians in 18th-century England, Pierre Dubois; The Lee sisters: 18th-century commercial heroines, Marion Marceau; 18th-century images of working women, Isabelle Baudino. Index.

    Biography

    Isabelle Baudino is Senior Lecturer at Ecole Normale Superieure in Lyon, France. Professor Jacques Carré is from the Université Paris IV-Sorbonne, France. Professor Cécile Révauger is Professor at the University of Bordeaux III, France.