Young Women Work and Family in England 1918-1950
English

About The Book

This fascinating account of young women's lives challenges existing assumptions about working class life and womanhood in England between the end of the First World War and the beginning of the 1950s. While contemporaries commonly portrayed young women as pleasure-loving leisure consumers this book argues that the world of work was in fact central to their life experiences. Social and economic history are woven together to examine the working family and social lives of the maids factory workers shop assistants and clerks who made up the majority of England's young women. Selina Todd traces the complex interaction between class gender and locale that shaped young women's roles at work and home indicating that paid work structured people's lives more profoundly than many social histories suggest. Rich autobiographical accounts show that while poverty continued to constrain life choices young women also made their own history. Far from being apathetic workers or pliant consumers they forged new patterns of occupational and social mobility were important breadwinners in working class homes developed a distinct youth culture and acted as workplace militants. In doing so they helped to shape twentieth-century society.
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