The Business of Everyday Life: Gender, Practice and Social Politics in England, C.1600-1900 (Gender in History)

by Beverly Lemire

Kim Latham (Index)

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Book cover for The Business of Everyday Life

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In times past, everyday business might mean making a trip to the pawnbroker, giving a loan to a trusted friend of selling off a coat, all to make ends meet. Both women and men engaged in this daily budgeting, but women's roles were especially important in achieving some level of comfort and avoiding penury. In some communities, the daily practices in place in the seventeenth century persisted into the twentieth, whilst other groups adopted new ways, such as using numbers to chart domestic affairs and turning to the savings banks that appeared in the nineteenth century. These strategies promised respectability and greater access to new consumer goods: better clothes and finer furnishings accompanied a newly disciplined behaviour.

Therefore, in the material world of the past and in the changing habits of earlier generations lie crucial turning points. This book explores these previously under-researched patterns and practices that gave shape to modern consumer society.
  • ISBN10 0719072220
  • ISBN13 9780719072222
  • Publish Date 17 April 2006
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 14 February 2012
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Manchester University Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 272
  • Language English