Women and Ageing in British Society since 1500

Women and Ageing in British Society since 1500

by Lynn Botelho, Pat Thane
Women and Ageing in British Society since 1500

Women and Ageing in British Society since 1500

by Lynn Botelho, Pat Thane

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Overview

Women have always made up the majority of older people: this examination of the lives of elderly women in Britain in the period 1500 to the present reveals attitudes towards the ageing process. It sheds light on household structures as well as wider issues - including the history of the family, the process of industrialisation, the poor law, and welfare provision - and questions many common beliefs about elderly women, particularly that female old age was a time of poverty and want. An important book for students of history and sociology alike.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780582329027
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 01/02/2001
Series: Women And Men In History
Pages: 260
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables, List of Contributors, Acknowledgements, Introduction, 1. Strategies of poor aged women and widows in sixteenth-century London, 2. Who most needs to marry? Ageing and inequality among women and men in early modern Norwich, 3. Old age and menopause in rural women of early modern Suffolk, 4. 'I feel myself decay apace': Old age in the diary of Lady Sarah Cowper (1644-1720), 5. Old maids: the lifecycle of single women in early modern England, 6. The old woman's home in eighteenth-century England, 7. The residence patterns of elderly English women in comparative perspective, 8. Old and incapable? Louisa Twining and elderly women in Victorian Britain, 9. 'An inheritance of fear': older women in the twentieth-century countryside, 10. Old women in twentieth-century Britain, Bibliographical essay: Older women in Britain since 1500, Index
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