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Respectable Citizens: Gender, Family, and Unemployment in Ontario's Great Depression
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Campbell, Lara A. (Author)
 
Title
            Respectable Citizens: Gender, Family, and Unemployment in Ontario's Great Depression
        Abstract
            High unemployment rates, humiliating relief policy, and the spectre of eviction characterized the experiences of many Ontario families in the Great Depression. Respectable Citizens is an examination of the material difficulties and survival strategies of families facing poverty and unemployment, and an analysis of how collective action and protest redefined the meanings of welfare and citizenship in the 1930s.Lara Campbell draws on diverse sources including newspapers, family and juvenile court records, premiers' papers, memoirs, and oral histories to uncover the ways in which the material workings of the family and the discursive category of 'respectable' citizenship were invested with gendered obligations and Anglo-British identity. Respectable Citizens demonstrates how women and men represented themselves as entitled to make specific claims on the state, shedding new light on the cooperative and conflicting relationships between men and women, parents and children, and citizen and state in 1930s Canada. --Publisher's description
        Place
            Toronto
        Publisher
            University of Toronto Press
        Date
            2009
        # of Pages
            xi, 280 pages, [8] pages of plates: illustrations, portraits
        Language
            English
        ISBN
            978-0-8020-9669-2
        Extra
            Book available at Internet Archive to readers with print disabilities: https://archive.org/details/respectablecitiz00camp
OCLC: 404612900
        Notes
            Contents: 1.'Giving All the Good in Me to Save My Children': Domestic Labour, Motherhood, and 'Making Do' in Ontario Families -- 2. 'If He Is a Man He Becomes Desperate': Unemployed Husbands, Fathers, and Workers -- 3. Obligations of Family: Parents, Children's Labour, and Youth Culture -- 4. 'A Family's Self-Respect and Morale': Negotiating Respectability and Conflict in Home and Family -- 5. Militant Mothers and Loving Fathers: Gender, Family, and Ethnicity in Protest -- Conclusion: Survival, Citizenship, and State.
Citation
            Campbell, L. A. (2009). Respectable Citizens: Gender, Family, and Unemployment in Ontario’s Great Depression. University of Toronto Press. https://utppublishing.com/doi/book/10.3138/9780802096692
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