Naval Seamen''s Women in Nineteenth-Century Britain
English
By (author): Dr Melanie Holihead
Explores the lived experiences of the women of lower deck seamen in the nineteenth century British navy. This book explores the lived experiences of the women - the mothers, sisters, foster-mothers of motherless children, but above all the wives - of lower deck seamen in the nineteenth century British navy. It makes extensive use of the allotment scheme, a system which enabled men to convey portions of their pay to dependants at home. The scheme had been devised by a Royal Navy worried by the adverse effect on naval manpower caused by experienced and mature sailors quitting the service in order to support loved ones suffering poverty on shore. Drawing also on civil, parish and local data, the book reveals hitherto unknown differences between naval and civilian patterns of nuptiality, family life, occupation and household structure. It illustrates the impact of naval breadwinners' long-term absence in analyses of local migration, mutual support networks, and clusterings of same ship families, and to bring the picture to life it includes microhistories and stories of individual women. The book concludes that while the sailor's woman's allotted place in the popular imagination shifted with changing perceptions of sailors' reputation and standing, a constant otherness attached to women who chose marriage to long-absent men, and a life of necessary self-reliance.
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Current price
€98.09
Original price
€108.99
Will deliver when available. Publication date 19 Nov 2024