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OverviewCurrent thinking considers the Women's Cooperative Guild within the English Cooperative Movement to have been an independent and democratically run organization whose leaders built sisterhood across class lines and achieved many benefits for married working-class women. This study of the dynamics of gender within the movement between 1883 and 1921 arrives at different conclusions. Blaszak examines what freedoms of speech and activity women were permitted within the movement, as well as what resources they were given to accomplish their tasks. Ultimately, the parameters set by the men would determine the type of female leadership that emerged and whether it was able to realize its feminist and utopian agendas. Setting the organization's activities within the context of gender relations in the Cooperative Movement, Blaszak finds that the Guild was much more dependent and much less democratically directed than has usually been supposed. Restrictions established by male cooperators and enhanced by the realities of working-class life turned the Guild into a clique dominated by a few. Even the Guild's most revered leader, Margaret Llewelyn Davies, found it impossible to escape the gendered socio-economic circumstances in which she labored at her ministry to improve the lives of working-class women. Consequently, her leadership inadvertently assisted male cooperators in their attempts to limit possibilities for women. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Barbara J. BlaszakPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Praeger Publishers Inc Volume: No. 56 Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.539kg ISBN: 9780313309953ISBN 10: 0313309957 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 30 December 1999 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents"Introduction Women in the English Cooperative Movement Women's Space/Women's Place The ""Woman's Corner"" of the Co-operative News The Gendered Geography of the Cooperative Movement Angels in the Store The Early Leaders of the Women's Cooperative Guild Margaret Llewelyn Davies: A Woman with a Mission The Dysfunctional Commonwealth Rent at the Seams: Sisterhood in the Women's Cooperative Guild The Battle between the Sexes in the Cooperative Movement Conclusion Contradictions and Conflicts Bibliography Index"ReviewsBlaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society. -Albion [E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement. -Labor History Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research. -Journal of Co-operative Studies E ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice ?[E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining.?-Choice ?Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research.?-Journal of Co-operative Studies ?Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement.?-Labor History ?Blaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society.?-Albion The policies and publications of the Women's Cooperative Guild have been central to women's history since its revival in the early 1970s, but very few scholars have looked in such detail at how both were actually constructed. Barbara Blaszak's new book is a fascinating and sobering study of the limits placed on this women's organization by its male-controlled parent' body, the Cooperative Union. In its analysis of the politics and leadership of Margaret Lleyellyn Davies, it also offers a cool reappraisal of a dedicated social reformer's efforts on behalf of working-class women. An extremely important contribution. -Ellen Ross Professor of History and Women's Studies Ramapo College of New Jersey The policies and publications of the Women's Cooperative Guild have been central to women's history since its revival in the early 1970s, but very few scholars have looked in such detail at how both were actually constructed. Barbara Blaszak's new book is a fascinating and sobering study of the limits placed on this women's organization by its male-controlled parent' body, the Cooperative Union. In its analysis of the politics and leadership of Margaret Lleyellyn Davies, it also offers a cool reappraisal of a dedicated social reformer's efforts on behalf of working-class women. An extremely important contribution. -Ellen Ross Professor of History and Women's Studies Ramapo College of New Jersey ?[E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining.?-Choice ?Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research.?-Journal of Co-operative Studies ?Blaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society.?-Albion ?Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement.?-Labor History YEven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice [E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research. -Journal of Co-operative Studies Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement. -Labor History Blaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society. -Albion Blaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society. -Albion [E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement. -Labor History Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research. -Journal of Co-operative Studies �E�ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining. -Choice ?[E]ven readers with a limited interest in the WCG should find this study worth examining.?-Choice ?Interestingly and convincingly, she argues that male co-operators were particularly wary of female intervention in the movement.?-Labor History ?Blasak's book is a heavyweight co-operative history. It deserves to be ranked with the best....it is eminently readable and is based on remarkably in depth research.?-Journal of Co-operative Studies ?Blaszak recounts the story of the Women's Cooperative Guild, she does so more broadly in the context of the gendered politics of the cooperative movement as a whole. She argues convincingly that men established the boundaries in which women operated, that they feared the feminization of cooperation, and that, consequently, much of the previous work on the Guild has tended to overestimate the achievements of female cooperation....Blaszak has made an important contribution to our understanding of the gendered politics of cooperation in modern British society.?-Albion The policies and publications of the Women's Cooperative Guild have been central to women's history since its revival in the early 1970s, but very few scholars have looked in such detail at how both were actually constructed. Barbara Blaszak's new book is a fascinating and sobering study of the limits placed on this women's organization by its male-controlled parent' body, the Cooperative Union. In its analysis of the politics and leadership of Margaret Lleyellyn Davies, it also offers a cool reappraisal of a dedicated social reformer's efforts on behalf of working-class women. An extremely important contribution. -Ellen Ross Professor of History and Women's Studies Ramapo College of New Jersey The policies and publications of the Women's Cooperative Guild have been central to women's history since its revival in the early 1970s, but very few scholars have looked in such detail at how both were actually constructed. Barbara Blaszak's new book is a fascinating and sobering study of the limits placed on this women's organization by its male-controlled parent' body, the Cooperative Union. In its analysis of the politics and leadership of Margaret Lleyellyn Davies, it also offers a cool reappraisal of a dedicated social reformer's efforts on behalf of working-class women. An extremely important contribution. -Ellen Ross Professor of History and Women's Studies Ramapo College of New Jersey Author InformationBARBARA J. BLASZAK is an Associate Professor and the Chair of the Department of History at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, New York. She has published works about the Cooperative Movement in England and on women's roles in that movement. She is a past president of the New York State Association of European Historians and is active in the Middle Atlantic Conference on British Studies. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |