Social Science Women's Studies
Making Do
Women, Family and Home in Montreal during the Great Depression
- Publisher
- Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- Initial publish date
- Oct 1999
- Category
- Women's Studies, Translating & Interpreting, Post-Confederation (1867-)
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780889203266
- Publish Date
- Oct 1999
- List Price
- $38.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Life in the Great Depression — long lines of unemployed, soup kitchens, men riding the rails, public works projects — these are the graphic images of the Great Depression of the 1930s, popularized by the press and seared into our memories. But outside of a few distinctive stories gathered from the oral and anecdotal writings on strategies used to survive, we know next to nothing about the daily life of the working class during those long and hungry years.
How did the families survive when the principal breadwinner was unemployed? How did they feed, shelter and clothe themselves when relief payments covered barely half of their essential needs? To answer these questions Denyse Baillargeon looks at the contribution of the housewives. By interviewing Montreal francophone women who were already married at the beginning of the 1930s, and by examining their principal responsibilities, she uncovers the alternative strategies these housewives used to counter poverty. Their recollections made it possible to shed light not only on the impact of the economic crisis on their household duties during the Depression but also on their lives from childhood to World War II, and on the living conditions of the working class from which most of them came. This material is all the more valuable because it proceeds from a generation of women that will soon disappear and who have left very little in the way of written evidence behind.
This study, which draws us into the intricate lives of individuals, reveals a previously unexplored dimension of the Depression and shows the importance of considering the domestic sphere for understanding the complete history of the working class.
About the authors
Denyse Baillargeon is a professor in the History Department at the Universit? de Montr?al. She is the author of Making Do: Women, Family and Home in Montreal during the Great Depression (WLU Press, 1999).
After teaching in England and the West Indies, W. Donald Wilson joined the faculty of the University of Waterloo in 1970, where he remained until his retirement. A former chair of the Department of French Studies at UW, he is the translator, with Paul G. Socken, of Aaron: A Novel, by Yves Th?riault (WLU Press, 2007).
Denyse Baillargeon's profile page
Yvonne M. Klein is a retired professor of English and a professional translator and editor.
Editorial Reviews
Baillargeon's well-conceived study is welcome for its fresh perspective and contribution to a growing genre of women's history focusing on women's experience of daily life in an era of privation....A solid contribution to women's history generally and to Canadian women's history in particular.
M.J. Moore, <i>Choice</i>
The translation of this book, which was well received when it was published in French in 1991, will be welcomed by anglophone readers interested not only in the history of working-class women but also in the history of the popular and political cultures of 20th-century Canada.
Dominique Marshall, <i>Canadian Book Review Annual</i>