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'I've Never Dreamed It Was Necessary to Marry!': Women and Work in New
England French Canadian Communities, 1870–1930
FLORENCEMAE WALDRON
OVER THE PAST DECADE, several
scholars of migrants to northeastern United States cities have cautioned
against reading women's migration as a clear-cut process of "liberation."
Instead, they maintain that positioning U.S. cities as lands of opportunity
for women, in contrast to a repressive homeland environment, can be misleading
and inaccurate. In an article on the experiences of Puerto Rican women
who relocated to the U.S. mainland in the latter decades of the twentieth
century, sociologist Marixsa Alicea criticizes studies of migrant women
that posit "home" as unilaterally more restrictive than life in the United
States and the migrants' host communities as unequivocally "freeing" or
"liberating" for women. In an examination of Italian and Jewish immigrants
to New York City in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
anthropologist Nancy Foner echoes these concerns. "For many Jewish and
Italian women," Foner writes, "the journey to New York imposed new constraints,
and they were forced to lead more sheltered lives than they had in the
Old World"; at the same time, "[t]he role of housewife and mother" was
by no means wholly oppressive to these immigrant women, for it "carried
with it respectability and the approval of family and neighbors."
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