Woman's Place

Regular price €47.99
A01=Elizabeth Roberts
Author_Elizabeth Roberts
barrow
Category=JBSD
Category=JBSF1
Category=NHB
Category=NHTB
century
conscious
decade
elderly
elizabeth
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family
feeling
home
interviews
last
life
memories
nineteenth
oppression
outbreak
people
period
place
private
robertss
second
towns
upon
womans
women
workingclass

Product details

  • ISBN 9780631147541
  • Weight: 397g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Feb 1995
  • Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A Woman's Place is based upon Elizabeth Roberts's interviews with 160 elderly people from the towns of Barrow, Lancaster and Preston. They recall their memories of family life as children, youths and adults in the period between the last decade of the nineteenth century and the outbreak of the Second World War.

A Woman's Place shows working-class women to be conscious of, and secure in, the separate, private sphere of home and family, with little feeling of male oppression, but more of class oppression and economic injustice to man and woman alike. A woman's key place within the family as budget manager and domestic decision taker was widely recognized. It was, however, a position won at great cost. The hazards of childbirth, the grueling physical routines of washing, cleaning and cooking, the necessity of undertaking part-time, or (in Preston especially) full-time paid employment to boost the family's meager income, were the coin with which that role was bought. This hard female experience from childhood to motherhood is carefully and sensitively recorded, and the oral evidence supported and elucidated by documentary material from a wide range of local and national sources.

Elizabeth Roberts's classic work in the oral history of the family is now reissued to coincide with the publication of Women and Families to which it is a direct prequel. Taken together the two books provide an unrivaled picture of almost a century of social change.

Elizabeth Roberts is Research Fellow at the Centre for North-West Regional Studies at the University of Lancaster.