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The Market Revolution

The Market Revolution, 1820s-1830s

  • production for local subsistence led to production for national and international markets

  • economic transformation tied to new technologies

    • transportation and communication revolutions

    • new methods of banking and finance

  • dramatically transformed society, culture, religion, politics

The Market Revolution and Gender

  • market revolution changed gender roles

    • wage work undercut “independence” ideal

    • dependence on the market

    • more women and children working outside home

  • anxieties and new ideals

The Cult of Domesticity

  • ideology of “separate spheres” or “domesticity”

    • men worked and earned money in the “public sphere”

    • women and children were sheltered in the “private” or “domestic” sphere

    • ideal didn’t match reality

      • most families’ experiences didn’t match

      • achieving it was a status symbol for middle/upper class families

    • responded to anxieties over social change

Companionate Marriage

  • 18th century “institutional marriage”

    • an economic relationship

  • 19th century was start of “companionate marriage”

    • still economic, but also emotional

AS

The Market Revolution

The Market Revolution, 1820s-1830s

  • production for local subsistence led to production for national and international markets

  • economic transformation tied to new technologies

    • transportation and communication revolutions

    • new methods of banking and finance

  • dramatically transformed society, culture, religion, politics

The Market Revolution and Gender

  • market revolution changed gender roles

    • wage work undercut “independence” ideal

    • dependence on the market

    • more women and children working outside home

  • anxieties and new ideals

The Cult of Domesticity

  • ideology of “separate spheres” or “domesticity”

    • men worked and earned money in the “public sphere”

    • women and children were sheltered in the “private” or “domestic” sphere

    • ideal didn’t match reality

      • most families’ experiences didn’t match

      • achieving it was a status symbol for middle/upper class families

    • responded to anxieties over social change

Companionate Marriage

  • 18th century “institutional marriage”

    • an economic relationship

  • 19th century was start of “companionate marriage”

    • still economic, but also emotional