ABSTRACT

In the 1950s heated views were sometimes expressed about the alleged social results of married women going out to work. Originally published in 1962 Married Women Working attempts to examine the question objectively. It is based on two studies undertaken over a period of nearly five years in a solidly working-class London district – one, a detailed study in the factory of a well-known firm of biscuit makers (Peek Freans) relying mainly on married women workers; the other, a more general one, in the surrounding borough as a whole. How effective was the married woman as an employee? How did the firm cope with their new type of labour and with what results? What was the effect on the woman herself, and on her family, of her attempt to fill the dual role of home-maker and paid worker? These are some of the questions examined in this book, which also gives a very fascinating picture of how people lived at the time, against the background of earlier generations.

chapter Chapter I|11 pages

Work and Family

chapter Chapter II|8 pages

Perspectives and Methods 1

chapter Chapter III|16 pages

Bermondsey's Past

chapter Chapter IV|9 pages

Bermondsey Today

chapter Chapter V|8 pages

The Peek Frean Factory

chapter Chapter VI|20 pages

Married Women as Employees at Peek Frean's

chapter Chapter VII|24 pages

The Bermondsey Wives who Worked

chapter Chapter VIII|21 pages

Home Making

chapter Chapter IX|28 pages

The Children

chapter Chapter X|13 pages

Conclusions