The Limits of Patriarchy: How Female Networks of Pilfering and Gossip Sparked the First Debates on Rural Gender Rights in the 19th-Century Finnish-Language Press
Abstract
"In the mid-19th century, letters to newspapers in Finland began to condemn a practice known as home thievery, in which farm mistresses pilfered goods from their farms to sell behind the farm master’s back. Why did farm mistresses engage home thievery and why were writers so harsh in their disapproval of it? Why did many men in their letters nonetheless sympathize with women’s pilfering? What opinions did farm daughters express? This book explores theoretical concepts of agency and power applied to the 19th-century context and takes a closer look at the family patriarch, resistance to patriarchal power by farm mistresses and their daughters, and the identities of those Finnish men who already in the 1850s and 1860s sought to defend the rights of rural farm women."
Keywords
women's history; modernization; 19th-century; agency; rural; gender; Ethnography; Finland; Finnish language; Kuopio; Patriarchy; SKS; Uusi SuomiDOI
10.21435/sfe.13ISBN
9789522227928;9789522227584OCN
982228500Publisher
Finnish Literature Society / SKSPublication date and place
Helsinki, 2011Series
Studia Fennica Ethnologica, 13Classification
Finland
19th century, c 1800 to c 1899
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999
Social and cultural history
Oral history
Anthropology