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Daughters of the Great Depression: Women, Work, and Fiction in the American 1930s

Author Laura Hapke
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Category Literary Criticism
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Book Details
Author(s)Laura Hapke
ISBN / ASIN0820319082
ISBN-139780820319087
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,503,723
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Daughters of the Great Depression is a reinterpretation of more than fifty well-known and rediscovered works of Depression-era fiction that illuminate one of the decade's central conflicts: whether to include women in the hard-pressed workforce or relegate them to a literal or figurative home sphere.

Laura Hapke argues that working women, from industrial wage earners to business professionals, were the literary and cultural scapegoats of the 1930s. In locating these key texts in the "don't steal a job from a man" furor of the time, she draws on a wealth of material not usually considered by literary scholars, including articles on gender and the job controversy; Labor Department Women's Bureau statistics; "true romance" stories and "fallen woman" films; studies of African American women's wage earning; and Fortune magazine pronouncements on white-collar womanhood.

A valuable revisionist study, Daughters of the Great Depression shows how fiction's working heroines so often cast as earth mothers, flawed mothers, lesser comrades, harlots, martyrs, love slaves, and manly or apologetic professionals joined their real-life counterparts to negotiate the misogynistic labor climate of the 1930s.

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