
Few Historians Have Contributed More To Our Understanding Of The History Of Women, And Women's Effect On History, Than Alice Kessler-harris. Author Of The Classic Out To Work, She Is One Of The Country's Leading Scholars Of Gender, The Economy, And Public Policy. In This Volume, Kessler-harris Pierces The Skin Of Arguments And Legislation To Grasp The Preconceptions That Have Shaped The Experience Of Women: A Gendered Imagination That Has Defined What Men And Women Alike Think Of As Fair And Desirable. In This Brilliant Account That Traces Social Policy From The New Deal To The 1970s, She Shows How A Deeply Embedded Set Of Beliefs Has Distorted Seemingly Neutral Social Legislation To Further Limit The Freedom And Equality Of Women. Government Rules Generally Sought To Protect Women From Exploitation, Even From Employment Itself; But At The Same Time, They Attached The Most Important Benefits To Wage Work. To Be A Real Citizen, One Must Earn--and Most Policymakers (even Female Ones) Assumed From The Beginning That Women Were Not, And Should Not Be Breadwinners. Kessler-harris Traces The Impact Of This Gender Bias In The New Deal Programs Of Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, And Fair Labor Standards, In Federal Income Tax Policy, And The New Discussion Of Women's Rights That Emerged After World War Ii. For Generations, She Writes, American Women Lacked Not Merely The Practice, But Frequently The Idea Of Individual Economic Freedom. Only In The 1960s And '70s Did Old Assumptions Begin To Break Down--yet The Process Is Far From Complete. Even Today, With Women Closer To Full Economic Citizenship Than Ever Before, Kessler-harris's Insights Offer A Keen New Understanding Of The Issues That Dominate The Headlines, From The Marriage Penalty In The Tax Code To The Glass Ceiling In Corporate America.
How have deeply embedded gendered preconceptions within American social policy historically constrained women's economic freedom and citizenship? Alice Kessler-Harris, a preeminent scholar of gender and labor history, utilizes extensive archival research and legislative analysis to argue that a 'gendered imagination' has consistently distorted neutral-appearing laws. By examining the period from the New Deal through the 1970s, she demonstrates how policymakers codified the assumption that women were not intended to be primary breadwinners, thereby linking essential benefits to a male-centric model of employment.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of labor history and gender policy in the United States. Readers often note the rigorous academic density of the prose, which provides a comprehensive look at how legislative intent has shaped modern economic realities.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198020899
ISBN-13:
9780198020899
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