ROSALYN BAXANDALL AND LINDA GORDON, EDITORS

America's Working Women

A Documentary History
Revised and Updated

A landmark work when it appeared in 1976, America's Working Women helped form the field of women's studies and transform labor history. Now the authors have enlarged the dimensions of this important anthology; more than half the selections and all the introductory material are new. Spanning the years from 1600 to the present, selections from diaries, popular magazines, historical works, oral histories, letters, poetry, and fiction show women's creativity in supporting themselves and their families. Slave women recall their field work, family work, and sabotage. We see Native American women farming, and we also see the white culture coercing these women to give up farming. We see women in industry playing a central role in the union movement while facing the particular hazards of women's jobs and working conditions. New selections show the historical origins of today's important issues: sexual harassment, equal pay, "sex work," work in the underground economy, and home and shift work. With an expanded focus on women from all racial and ethnic backgrounds and regions, America's Working Women grounds us in the battles women have fought and the ones they still have to win.

Rosalyn Baxandall is a professor of American studies at the State University of New York, Old Westbury. Linda Gordon is the Florence Kelley Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

1995 / paper / ISBN 0-393-31262-3 / Photographs / 430 pages / HISTORY/GENDER STUDIES

  • Rosalyn Baxandall is the author of Words on Fire: The Life and Writings of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. Linda Gordon is the author of Pitied But Not Entitled: Single Mothers and the History of Welfare.

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