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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Laura Schwartz (University of Warwick)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.10cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781108457743ISBN 10: 1108457746 Pages: 245 Publication Date: 18 June 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of figures; Acknowledgements; Introduction. Whose problem was the 'servant problem'?; 1. The 'servant problem' and the suffrage home; 2. Servants in the suffrage movement; 3. The housework problem; 4. Domestic labour and the feminist work ethic; 5. The domestic workers' union of Great Britain and Ireland; 6. Servants and co-operative housekeeping; Conclusion; Index.Reviews'Exploitation is not about whether employers are nice or nasty, says Laura Schwartz. In this book it's about the labour relationship between women - feminist, suffragist and other - and their servants. A scintillating contribution to the new labour history of Britain in which voices from the women workers historians have most neglected, speak loud and clear.' Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick 'A wonderful, lucid account of the relationship between domestic service and women's suffrage in early twentieth-century Britain. Schwartz highlights the contradictions within the movement, and sensitively draws attention to long lasting structural inequalities. Using richly woven archival material, Schwartz offers a brilliant intervention and model on how one can write a feminist history of class-based struggle that highlights the voices and perspectives of domestic workers. A must-read.' Sumita Mukherjee, University of Bristol 'Laura Schwartz has given us a rich account of the social and everyday history of paid for domestic labour in early twentieth century Britain. Feminism and the Servant Problem is an exciting new breed of history that spans the social, cultural, intellectual, emotional, and political. Written with panache, this history offers a fascinating new angle on suffrage feminism.' Lucy Delap, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge 'This is not simply another history of the suffrage campaign, though it does much to enrich our understanding of everyday politics in the women's movement, and particularly cross-class relationships within it. Rather, it is an exceptionally lucid contribution to histories of work and feminism which is unusually effective at bringing emotional texture to intellectual debates and using individual critiques to illuminate structural inequalities. Energetic and exceptionally clear and accessible prose will make it invaluable to students as well as more advanced scholars. It is an outstanding achievement.' Lyndsey Jenkins, Women's History Review '... [a] meticulous, fascinating study ...' Zoe Fairbairns, Book Oxygen (www.bookoxygen.com) '... offers the first full-length study of the relationship between middle-class feminists in England and their servants ... Schwartz's work ably explores suffrage in a wider political context.' R. J. Bates, Choice 'This is a landmark study of domestic service, work and feminist politics which will surely engage readers across the academy and beyond, and should be adopted on reading lists at all levels of undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.' Zoe Thomas, Social History '... Feminism and the Servant Problem is an important contribution to the history of work and feminism. By integrating servants' voices into the history of the suffrage movement, Schwartz has produced a new account of servants' politics and shown how first-wave feminism thought to transform the home and the domestic labour happening within it.' Fanny Louvier, Labour History Review 'A strength of this book lies in Schwartz's ability to combine her feminist commitment to the present with a sharp historical focus ... Schwartz's confident, energetic book is a fundamental text for those wishing to understand how early feminists grappled with the burden of reproductive labour. Many of their questions remained unresolved today.' Grace Whorrall-Campbell, Family & Community History 'Exploitation is not about whether employers are nice or nasty, says Laura Schwartz. In this book it's about the labour relationship between women - feminist, suffragist and other - and their servants. A scintillating contribution to the new labour history of Britain in which voices from the women workers historians have most neglected, speak loud and clear.' Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick 'A wonderful, lucid account of the relationship between domestic service and women's suffrage in early twentieth-century Britain. Schwartz highlights the contradictions within the movement, and sensitively draws attention to long lasting structural inequalities. Using richly woven archival material, Schwartz offers a brilliant intervention and model on how one can write a feminist history of class-based struggle that highlights the voices and perspectives of domestic workers. A must-read.' Sumita Mukherjee, University of Bristol 'Laura Schwartz has given us a rich account of the social and everyday history of paid for domestic labour in early twentieth century Britain. Feminism and the Servant Problem is an exciting new breed of history that spans the social, cultural, intellectual, emotional, and political. Written with panache, this history offers a fascinating new angle on suffrage feminism.' Lucy Delap, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge 'This is not simply another history of the suffrage campaign, though it does much to enrich our understanding of everyday politics in the women's movement, and particularly cross-class relationships within it. Rather, it is an exceptionally lucid contribution to histories of work and feminism which is unusually effective at bringing emotional texture to intellectual debates and using individual critiques to illuminate structural inequalities. Energetic and exceptionally clear and accessible prose will make it invaluable to students as well as more advanced scholars. It is an outstanding achievement.' Lyndsey Jenkins, Women's History Review '... [a] meticulous, fascinating study ...' Zoe Fairbairns, Book Oxygen (www.bookoxygen.com) '... offers the first full-length study of the relationship between middle-class feminists in England and their servants ... Schwartz's work ably explores suffrage in a wider political context.' R. J. Bates, Choice 'This is a landmark study of domestic service, work and feminist politics which will surely engage readers across the academy and beyond, and should be adopted on reading lists at all levels of undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.' Zoe Thomas, Social History 'Exploitation is not about whether employers are nice or nasty, says Laura Schwartz. In this book it's about the labour relationship between women - feminist, suffragist and other - and their servants. A scintillating contribution to the new labour history of Britain in which voices from the women workers historians have most neglected, speak loud and clear.' Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick 'A wonderful, lucid account of the relationship between domestic service and women's suffrage in early twentieth-century Britain. Schwartz highlights the contradictions within the movement, and sensitively draws attention to long lasting structural inequalities. Using richly woven archival material, Schwartz offers a brilliant intervention and model on how one can write a feminist history of class-based struggle that highlights the voices and perspectives of domestic workers. A must-read.' Sumita Mukherjee, University of Bristol 'Laura Schwartz has given us a rich account of the social and everyday history of paid for domestic labour in early twentieth century Britain. Feminism and the Servant Problem is an exciting new breed of history that spans the social, cultural, intellectual, emotional, and political. Written with panache, this history offers a fascinating new angle on suffrage feminism.' Lucy Delap, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge 'This is not simply another history of the suffrage campaign, though it does much to enrich our understanding of everyday politics in the women's movement, and particularly cross-class relationships within it. Rather, it is an exceptionally lucid contribution to histories of work and feminism which is unusually effective at bringing emotional texture to intellectual debates and using individual critiques to illuminate structural inequalities. Energetic and exceptionally clear and accessible prose will make it invaluable to students as well as more advanced scholars. It is an outstanding achievement.' Lyndsey Jenkins, Women's History Review '... [a] meticulous, fascinating study ...' Zoe Fairbairns, Book Oxygen (www.bookoxygen.com) '... offers the first full-length study of the relationship between middle-class feminists in England and their servants ... Schwartz's work ably explores suffrage in a wider political context.' R. J. Bates, Choice 'This is a landmark study of domestic service, work and feminist politics which will surely engage readers across the academy and beyond, and should be adopted on reading lists at all levels of undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.' Zoe Thomas, Social History Author InformationLaura Schwartz is Associate Professor of Modern British History at the University of Warwick. She has published widely on the history of British feminism, and is the author of A Serious Endeavour: Gender Education and Community at St Hugh's, 1886–2011 (2011) and Infidel Feminism: Secularism, Religion and Women's Emancipation, England 1830–1914 (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |