ABSTRACT

Integrating analytical tools from feminist theory, cultural studies and sociology to illuminate detailed historical evidence, Sonya Rose argues that gender was a central organizing principle of the nineteenth-century industrial transformation in England. She elaborates a cultural theory of gender that suggests why it is an inherent aspect of all social and economic relations. Analysing employer strategies and state policies and the role of work in family life, she demonstrates that neither industrial transformation nor class relations can be understood when reduced to gender-neutral and abstract forces.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter |28 pages

“Maintaining the Industrial Supremacy of the Country”

Industrialists and Gendered Work

chapter |26 pages

“We Never Sought Protection for the Men Nor Do We Now”

The State and Public Policy

chapter |26 pages

“To Do the Best You Can”

Women's Work and Homework

chapter |24 pages

“Mary Had a Little Loom”

Gender Segregation, Struggles over the Labor Process, and Class Antagonism in the English Carpet Industry

chapter |28 pages

“Manliness, Virtue, and Self-Respect”

Gender Antagonism and Working-Class Respectability

chapter |31 pages

“Brothers and Sisters in Distress”

The Cotton Textile Weavers of Lancashire