Pursuing the meaning of gender in nineteenth-century urban American
society,
Ladies, Women, and Wenches compares the lives of
women living in two distinctive antebellum cultures, Charleston and
Boston, between 1820 and 1850. In contrast to most contemporary
histories of women, this study examines the lives of all types of
women in both cities: slave and free, rich and poor, married and
single, those who worked mostly at home and those who led more
public lives. Jane Pease and William Pease argue that legal,
political, economic, and cultural contraints did limit the options
available to women. Nevertheless, women had opportunities to make
meaningful choices about their lives and sometimes to achieve
considerable autonomy.
By comparing the women of Charleston and Boston, the authors
explore how both urbanization and regional differences --
especially with regard to slavery -- governed all women's lives.
They assess the impact of marriage and work on women's religious,
philanthropic, and reform activity and examine the female uses of
education and property in order to illuminate the considerable
variation in women's lives. Finally, they consider women's choices
of life-style, ranging from compliance with to defiance of
increasingly rigid social precepts defining appropriate female
behavior.
However bound women were by society's prescriptions describing
their role or by the class structure of their society, they chose
their ways of life from among such options as spinsterhood or
marriage, domesticity or paid work, charitable activity or the
social whirl, the solace of religion or the escape of drink.
Drawing on a variety of sources including diaries, court documents,
and contemporary literature,
Ladies, Women, and Wenches
explores how the women of Charleston and Boston made the choices in
their lives between total dependence and full autonomy.