| Women Workers in the Industrial Revolution Subjects: Politics & International Relations; Class and Work; Gender and Sexuality; Agencies and Institutions; Family and Demography; Economic Developments; Gender Roles and Stereotypes; Social Groups; Working Conditions; Education; Family; Femininity; Working Classes; Agricultural Revolution; Sunday Schools; Household Size; Industrialisation; First Published in 2004. It is often assumed that the woman worker was produced by the Industrial Revolution, and that since that time women have taken an increasing share in the world's work. This theory is, however, quite unsupported by facts. In every industrial system in the past women have been engaged in productive work and their contribution has been recognised as an indispensable factor. This volume is devoted to women's employment inagriculture and the agrarian revolution. Ivy Pinchbeck |