From Amazon.com
In
Women and the City: Gender, Power, and Space in Boston, 1870-1940,
Sarah Deutsch examines the relationship between the city's evolving structure and the choices and strategies of various groups of women. Her study follows the efforts of working-class, middle-class, and elite matrons as they struggled to shape the city to meet their respective needs. In succeeding, they redefined the moral geography of the city, and broadened Deutsch's own opportunities many decades later.
Deutsch orders her study topically. The first four chapters examine the politics of everyday life, showing how the daily lives and domestic spaces of women were intimately connected to the sorts of claims they made in and on public arenas. Her final three chapters follow women as they organize and institutionalize their efforts, demonstrating the complex ways in which the relationship between women and the public terrain is specific to class, ethnicity, and historical moment. As the book makes clear, space "does not have independent agency." Its meaning and power are determined by how groups of people organize their social, political, and economic interactions. For the women of Boston, the ability to lay claim to certain types of space and the power to shape place were crucial to meeting their basic needs.
A promising young historian from the University of Arizona, Deutsch breaks new ground in her analysis of women's role in shaping the modern city. Her thoroughly researched study makes frequent reference to individual biography, while illustrating a firm understanding of Boston history. Although her enthusiasm for detail and third-person narrative often obscures her larger claims, Women and the City clearly illustrates the ability of women to negotiate the urban terrain on their own terms. --Bertina Loeffler Sedlack
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
From Publishers Weekly
Until now, the history of cities has largely focused on the ways in which men have influenced the urban environment. When women are mentioned--usually as menial workers or prostitutes--they are usually rendered as exerting little or no influence on the physical cityscape. In this important and absorbing study, Deutsch, an associate professor of history at the University of Arizona, shows the myriad ways women of all classes, ethnicities and social positions radically transformed Boston from a city that regulated and curtailed women's lives to one where they enjoyed not only more freedom but some power as well. Drawing on a wide range of sources--public and private employment data, settlement house and church registries, reform and labor movement files and building and tax records--Deutsch demonstrates how organizing, gaining access to education and working in alternative and mainstream political venues led Boston women to create community networks, safe streets and public venues to advance female independence. She also documents a number of women-led strikes--from Irish telephone operators seeking higher wages to Jewish women demanding lower prices for kosher meat--and chronicles the efforts of women like Edith Gurrier and her lover, Edith Brown, who created a worker-run pottery collective that trained working-class women in both industry and business. As comprehensive as it is engrossing, Deutsch's work is a vital contribution to both women's history and urban studies. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.