Work, family, and faith : rural southern women in the twentieth century

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (6th floor)

Call Number
HQ1438.S63 W68 2006
Status
Checked Out (Due 5/20/2024)

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C630.1 W927w
Note
Dustjacket.
Call Number
C630.1 W927w
Status
In-Library Use Only
Item Note
Dustjacket.

Undergrad Library

Call Number
HQ1438.S63 W68 2006 c. 2
Status
Available

Summary

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the majority of rural southerners were dependent on agriculture and eked out a living as tenants on land owned by someone else. Women took on multiple duties, from child rearing to labor in the fields, to help meet their own goals of independence, well-being, and family persistence on the land. Over the course of the century, however, women found their lives and their work transformed. Government intervention, the Great Depression, and industrial job opportunities created by the two world wars and the development of Sun Belt industries lured or pushed tens of thousands of black and white rural southerners off the land.

As the American South changed around them, becoming more urban and industrialized, some women struggled to help their families survive in the increasingly large-scale and commercial agricultural economy, while other women eagerly seized opportunities to engage in rural reform, get better educations, and work at off-farm jobs. Whether they moved to the cities or stayed on the farms, most of these women continued to struggle against poverty and relied on tradition and inner strength to get by.

This well-researched, sharply focused, and keenly insightful collection of essays takes readers across the twentieth-century South, from rural roadside stands to tobacco fields to Sloss-Sheffield Steel's "Sloss Quarters" in Birmingham. Covering the full scope of southern rural women's varied lives, this book will be of particular value to anyone interested in sociology, women's studies, or southern history.

Contents

  • Acknowledgments p. ix
  • Introduction: Rebecca Sharpless and Melissa Walker p. 1
  • I Life on the Farm
  • "Work Was My Pleasure": An Oral History of Nellie Stancil Langley p. 17 Lu Ann Jones
  • "Pretty Near Every Woman Done a Man's Work": Women and Field Work in the Rural South p. 42 Rebecca Sharpless and Melissa Walker
  • II Rural Reformers at Work
  • "A Responsibility on Women That Cannot Be Delegated to Father, Husband, or Son": Farm Women and Cooperation in the Tobacco South p. 67 Evan P. Bennett
  • "Seizing the Opportunity": Home Demonstration Curb Markets in Virginia p. 97 Ann E. McCleary
  • Revitalizing Southern Homes: Rural Women, the Professionalization of Home Demonstration Work, and the Limits of Reform, 1917-1945 p. 135 Lynne Rieff
  • "You Got Us All a-Pullin' Together": Southern Methodist Deaconesses in the Rural South, 1922-1940 p. 166 Lois E. Myers
  • "Shepherdess of the Hills": The Salvation Army Mountain Ministry of Cecil Brown p. 202 Connie Park Rice
  • III Town and Country Come Together
  • Goin' North: The African American Women of Sloss Quarters p. 229 Karen R. Utz
  • "It Takes a Special Kind of Woman to Work Up There": Race, Gender, and the Impact of the Apparel Industry on Southern Alabama, 1937-2001 p. 257 Michelle Haberland
  • About the Contributors p. 283
  • Index p. 287

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