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Informationen zum Autor Gerry Holloway is a lecturer in Life History and Women's Studies at the Centre for Continuing Education at the University of Sussex. She has written extensively on women's history and the feminist movement and is on the Committee of the Women's History Network. Klappentext Examining over 150 years of women's employment history! this student resource considers how class! age! marital status! race and wider economic and political issues have affected women's opportunities and status in the workplace. Zusammenfassung Examining over 150 years of women's employment history, this essential student resource considers how class, age, marital status, race and wider economic and political issues have affected women's opportunities and status in the workplace. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction 2. 'Fit Work for Women' Working Class Women and Paid Work in the Mid Nineteenth Century 3. The Problem of the 'Superfluous Women' 4. Women Organizing: Trade Unions and Other Industrial Organizations 5. Equal or Different? Divisive Issues in the Industrial Women's Movement 6. Women's Work Before the First World War 7. Out of the Cage? Women's Experience of Work During the First World War 8. Women's Work in the Interwar Period 9. Women's Employment in World War Two: Continuity or Change? 10. Back to Home and Duty again? 11. Women's Employment in the 1950s and 1960s 12. Women's Work in the Age of Equal Opportunities: 1969 to the End of the Century 13. Women's Work since the 1840s. Appendix 1: Chronology of Important Dates. Appendix 2: Brief Biographies of Some Key Women