ABSTRACT

Women’s Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century is the first comprehensive collection of women’s economic writing in the long nineteenth century. The four-volume anthology includes writing from women around the world, showcases the wide variety and range of economic writing by women in the period, and establishes a tradition of women’s economic writing; selections include didactic tales, fictional illustrations, poetry, economic theory, social theory, reports, letters, novels, speeches, dialogues, and self-help books. The anthology is divided into eight themed sections: political economy, feminist economics, domestic economics, labor, philanthropy and poverty, consumerism, emigration and empire, and self-help. Each section begins with an introduction that tells a story about women writers’ relationship to the section theme and then provides an overview of the selections contained therein. Women’s Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century demonstrates just how common it was for women to write about economics in the nineteenth century and establishes important throughlines and trajectories within their body of work.

part 1|167 pages

Political Economy

chapter 1|12 pages

Conversations on Political Economy

chapter 3|6 pages

Women and Work

chapter 12|14 pages

Woman and Labour

chapter 13|26 pages

Women and Economics

chapter 14|10 pages

“Rent and Value”

Adapted From the First of the “Fabian Essays in Socialism”