Jeanne Boydston’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Home & Work: Housework, Wages, and the Ideology of Labor in the Early Republic
  • Book

June 1992

·

75 Reads

·

105 Citations

Journal of the Early Republic

Jeanne Boydston

Over the course of a two hundred year period, women's domestic labor gradually lost its footing as a recognized aspect of economic life in America. The image of the colonial "goodwife," valued for her contribution to household prosperity, had been replaced by the image of a "dependent" and a "non-producer." This book is a history of housework in the United States prior to the Civil War. More particularly, it is a history of women's unpaid domestic labor in the context of the emergence of an industrialized society in the northern United States. Boydston argues that just as a capitalist economic order had first to teach that wages were the measure of a man's worth, it had at the same time, implicitly or explicitly, to teach that those who did not draw wages were dependent and not essential to the "real economy." Developing a striking account of the gender and labor systems that characterized industrializing America, Boydston explains how this effected the devaluation of women's unpaid labor.

Citations (1)


... The production of goods became disconnected from women and homes, leaving home and childcare as the primary forms of labor occurring in the home. Care work, without a tangible good, was quickly devalued, and home labor slowly became less and less visible because it was not performed in the public sphere (Boydston, 1994). Friedrich Engels's (1972) theory of separate spheres assumes that labor performed outside of the home, or the public sphere, is different from labor performed in the home, the private sphere (Landes, 2003). ...

Reference:

Work-Life Balance and Flexible Organizational Space: Employed Mothers’ Use of Work-Friendly Child Spaces
Home & Work: Housework, Wages, and the Ideology of Labor in the Early Republic
  • Citing Book
  • June 1992

Journal of the Early Republic