ABSTRACT

This book re-evaluates and extends understandings about how work was conceived and what it could entail for women in the premodern period in Europe from c. 1100 to c. 1800. It does this by building on the impressive growth in literature on women’s working experiences, and by adopting new interpretive approaches that expand received assumptions about what constituted 'work' for women. While attention to the diversity of women’s contributions to the economy has done much to make the breadth of women’s experiences of labour visible, this volume takes a more expansive conceptual approach to the notion of work and considers the social and cultural dimensions in which activities were construed and valued as work. This interdisciplinary collection thus advances concepts of work that encompass cultural activities in addition to more traditional economic understandings of work as employment or labour for production. The chapters reconceptualise and explore work for women by asking how the working lives of historical women were enacted and represented, and analyse the relationships that shaped women’s experiences of work across the European premodern period.

chapter 2|21 pages

Working through letters

Women’s voices and epistolary culture in the Tegernseer Liebesbriefe 1

chapter 4|32 pages

‘When Adam delved and Eve span’

Gender and textile production in the Middle Ages

chapter 5|21 pages

‘Fortune ce mestier m’aprist’ 1

Christine de Pizan as writer, teacher, and Voice of Wisdom

chapter 6|20 pages

Home work

The bourgeois wife in later medieval England

chapter 7|25 pages

Gender, authority, and monastic work

Holy Cross in Brunswick, c. 1500

chapter 8|23 pages

‘Any Man or Woman beyng hole & mighty in body’

Women’s work under Tudor vagrancy law

chapter 9|22 pages

Working at the margins

Women and illicit economic practices in Lyon in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries 1

chapter 10|23 pages

Contested authority

Working women in leading positions in the early modern Dutch urban economy