Women in 1900: Gateway to the Political Economy of the Twentieth Century. .Women in 1900: Gateway to the Political Economy of the Twentieth Century. By Christine E. Bose (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2001. xi plus 257pp. $69.50/cloth $22.95/paper). In 1900 American women could not vote, serve on juries, run for elective office. Women's economic situation fundamentally depended on their marital status marital status, n the legal standing of a person in regard to his or her marriage state. . The overwhelming proportion of adult women married. In 1900 85% of women over the age of 25 in the U.S. were married or widowed. Women's legal, economic and social identity was subsumed into their husbands' under the traditional legal theory of marriage known as coverture coverture In law, the inclusion of a woman in the legal person of her husband upon marriage. Because of coverture, married women formerly lacked the legal capacity to hold their own property or to contract on their own behalf (see . If single, women were potential wives and mothers, primarily young women who would come under the economic protection and "cover" of their husbands in the near future. Widows were at the end of their lives, again without the protection of a spouse, but presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. provided for by their dead husbands or grown children. The small number of women outside such family relationships were truly "women adrift" in Joanne Meyerowitz' term, (1) and the subject of much worry about the failure of society to provide for them properly. A century later, these formal legal dependency relationships for adult women have by and large disappeared, though not the vestiges of coverture and discrimination in labor markets labor market A place where labor is exchanged for wages; an LM is defined by geography, education and technical expertise, occupation, licensure or certification requirements, and job experience and social institutions. Women still marry, bear children, and confront the life course stages based upon their marital status and biological clocks Biological clocks Self-sustained circadian (approximately 24-hour) rhythms regulating daily activities such as sleep and wakefulness were described as early as 1729. . Today they do so, however, in an equal opportunity society. Americans live longer, have smaller families, and thus the rhythms of the life course are fundamentally different from those a century ago. Christine Bose asks what the world of women in their economic and family roles was like in 1900 by way of making an implicit comparison with the political economy of women's situation today. She uses the public use microdata sample (PUMS PUMS Public-Use Microdata Samples (US Census Bureau) ) from the 1900 U.S. population census. (2) Bose systematically examines women's situation in terms of work and family and household systems, and provides a nationally representative analysis of both the fundamental patterns of all women's lives, and the diversity of experiences based upon women's ethnic, racial, regional situation, and urban or rural residence. The book is a model of clear exposition of the national patterns with their local or regional exceptions, and thus will be very useful in evaluating both the temporal comparisons from the beginning and end of the twentieth century, and for placing the historical case study literature into a national context. Needless to say, the published results of the 1900 census already provide much of the gross patterning that Bose interrogates. So why bother with a reanalysis? She provides two answers. First, she has a twenty first century vantage point, and is particularly interested in seeing if work patterns for adult women might look different (and similar to those today) if the unmeasured work of women in family enterprises, particularly farms, was added to work performed in the market economy. Second, she wishes to read through the 1900 census assumptions about women's "proper" roles based upon the then conventional notions of dependency and coverture to see if the census data themselves need to be restructured to reveal different patterns. Accordingly, she reorganizes and reinterprets the way the census reported "families" to identify "hidden" female headed households and the "unemployed" housewives who worked at home. She employs multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model. statistical analysis to evaluate the determinants of particular patterns. F or example she compares being a head of household as recognized in 1900, vs. being a "hidden head" and asks if the determinants of the different statuses were "cultural," that is a function of one's racial or ethnic status, or a function of the strong geographic concentration of particular groups of women. She argues that once one takes the geographic concentration of African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. and non immigrant Euro American women in rural areas into account, many of the reputed "ethnic" differences disappear. These reinterpretations and analyses need to be performed on individual level data, like the census public use samples. Bose estimates that in 1900 46.4% of women aged 15-64 "worked" in the formal and informal home based economy, compared with a 1994 rate of 58.8%. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the 1900 census definition, 22.5% of women "worked." Bose also estimates that the official rate of household headship head·ship n. 1. The position or office of a head or leader; primacy or command. 2. Chiefly British The position of a headmaster or headmistress. for women (about 10%) needs to be inflated to about 12% in 1900 because younger women with children (and without husbands) tended to become "hidden heads." That is, they and their children appear in the 1900 census as subfamilies in a larger household. That reinterpretation re·in·ter·pret tr.v. re·in·ter·pret·ed, re·in·ter·pret·ing, re·in·ter·prets To interpret again or anew. re also reduces the rate of change between the beginning and the end of the century. The Census 2000 Supplemental Survey reports that female headed family households make up 12.5% of all households, and 18.5% of all families. (3) And she highlights how the heavy ideological weight of notions of women's proper roles led to extreme occupational concentrat ion in the market economy in 1900. As she notes (p 128), "In 1900, a full third of all employed women in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. were doing domestic work." She devotes a chapter to women in domestic work, and explores the characteristics of servants and their households, including, for example, the proportion of live-in servants who could work for a household head of the same ethnic or racial background (38%); the proportion of households that had only one female servant (83%); and the possibility for creating ethnic enclaves An ethnic enclave, or ethnic neighborhood is a neighborhood, district, or suburb which retains some cultural distinction from a larger, surrounding area. Sometimes an entire city may have such a feel. and cross class alliances for women in service. Overall, Bose's detailed findings deserve the attention of scholars of women's situation, and hopefully will lead to further comparisons with contemporary analyses, for example, with Daphne Spain and Suzanne Bianchi's analysis of 1990 census patterns (4) and the forthcoming analysis from the 2000 Census. ENDNOTES (1.) Joanne Meyerowitz, Women Adrift: Independent Wage Earners in Chicago, 1880-1930 (Chicago, 1988). (2.) PUMS data files are available on line from the IPUMS IPUMS Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (University of Minnesota) Project at the University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher. http://umn.edu/. Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. , http://www.ipums.org. (3.) http://www.census.gov/c2ss/www/products/Profiles/2000/index.htm. (4.) Balancing Act: Motherhood, Marriage and Employment among American Women (New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , 1996). |
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