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Charlotte Perkins Gilman - Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution

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When Charlotte Perkins Gilmans first nonfiction book, Women and Economics, was published exactly a century ago, in 1898, she was immediately hailed as the leading intellectual in the womens movement. Her ideas were widely circulated and discussed; she was in great demand on the lecture circuit, and her intellectual circle included some of the most prominent thinkers of the age. Yet by the mid-1960s she was nearly forgotten, and Women and Economics was long out of print. Revived here with new introduction, Gilmans pivotal work remains a benchmark feminist text that anticipates many of the issues and thinkers of 1960s and resonates deeply with todays continuing debate about gender difference and inequality.Gilmans ideas represent an integration of socialist thought and Darwinian theory and provide a welcome disruption of the nearly all-male canon of American economic and social thought. She stresses the connection between work and home and between public and private life; anticipates the 1960s debate about wages for housework; calls for extensive childcare facilities and parental leave policies; and argues for new housing arrangements with communal kitchens and hired cooks. She contends that womens entry into the public arena and the reforms of the family would be a win-win situation for both women and men as the public sphere would no longer be deprived of womens particular abilities, and men would be able to enlarge the possibilities to experience and express the emotional sustenance of family life.The thorough and stimulating introduction by Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson provides substantial information about Gilmans life, personality, and background. It frames her impact on feminism since the Sixties and establishes her crucial role in the emergence of feminist and social thought.

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Page iii
Women and Economics
A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
With a New Introduction
by Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
BerkeleyLos AngelesLondon
Page iv
University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press, Ltd.
London, England
First University of California Press Paperback, 1998
Introduction 1998 by
Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 18601935.
Women and economics : a study of the economic relation
between men and women as a factor in social evolution /
Charlotte Perkins Gilman ; with a new introduction by
Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson.
p. cm.
Originally published: Boston : Small, Maynard & Co., 1898.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-520-20998-2 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. WomenEconomic conditions. I. Title.
HQ1381.G66Picture 21998
305.42dc21 97-52172
CIP
Printed in the United States of America
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The paper used in this publication is both acid-free and totally chlorine-free (TCF). It meets the minimum requirements of American Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Picture 3
Page v
Contents
Introduction
vii
Proem
lxxi
Author's Preface
lxxv
Women and Economics
1
Index
341

Page vii
Introduction to the 1998 Edition
Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson
Exactly a century ago, in 1898, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's first nonfiction book, Women and Economics, was published to universal acclaim. The book's publication catapulted its 38-year-old author into intellectual celebrity. Almost overnight she became "the leading intellectual in the women's movement."1 Her ideas were widely circulated and discussed; she was in great demand on the lecture circuit, and her intellectual circle included some of the most prominent thinkers of the age.
Yet by the mid-1960s, she was nearly forgotten, and Women and Economics long out of print. Thirty years ago, the eminent historian Carl Degler reintroduced Gilman's most distinguished work to a new generation of readers. Degler attributed Gilman's fall from popular view in part to the postsuffrage doldrums in which the American women's movement had found itself since the mid-1920s. But he, then perched in Poughkeepsie at Vassar College, sensed the emergent tenor of the times in the years immediately following the publication of Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique in 1963a renewed restlessness among American women about the yawning gap between the lives they wanted to live and the
Page viii
lives to which they had been consigned. Degler grasped the need of these increasingly politicized feminist intellectuals for foremothers, mentors who had been there before, wrestled with the same issues. By editing Women and Economics, Degler returned Charlotte Perkins Gilman to history.
Of course, he did not do it alone. After Women and Economics was reissued, Gilman's most famous works of fiction were also rediscovered and republished. Perhaps her most famous short story, "The Yellow Wallpaper," which chronicled the descent into madness of a woman when she was prevented from experiencing a vital public life, was anthologized in 1973 by Elaine Hedges; in 1980 by Gilman's biographer, Ann Lane; in 1989 by Lynne Sharon Schwartz; and in 1992 by Barbara Solomon. The most renowned of Gilman's utopian novels, Herland, which had only been serialized in her monthly magazine, the Forerunner, in 1915, was republished in 1979, and has remained a feminist classic, a touchstone work in which readers are invited to imagine the way society could develop if only there were no men in it.
Despite this recent interest, however, Women and Economics, Gilman's signal book, has once again gone out of print. We are reviving it now for its fresh and continuing insight to a generation of feminists and social thinkers poisedas they were when the book was writtenon the cusp of a new century.
Page ix
Degler's edition of Women and Economics spoke to what a second wave of feminist women wantedindeed, neededto read in the 1960s through the early 1990s. Second Wave feminism took its impetus, in part, from Friedan's indictment of the cult of domesticity. In her eyes, women had become virtual prisoners of their own homes, unable to work, unable really to have much of a public life at all. These sentiments echoed Gilman's insistence that women's economic independence was the single most important element in their emancipation.
By the 1980s, though, women had come to achieve that public presence and even a modicum of that economic independence Gilman advocated. The walls that had so long kept women out of the public sphere had begun to crumbleas decisively, if not as rapidly or completely, as the deliberate dismantling of the Berlin Wall. Women had entered the professions, the work world, the military (and its academies); women were in the House and the Senate, the statehouse and the courthouse.
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