Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood

Maternal Societies in Nineteenth-Century France

Christine Adams author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Illinois Press

Published:20th Jul '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood cover

How notions of motherhood shaped the development of social welfare

This far-reaching study of maternal societies in post-revolutionary France focuses on the philanthropic work of the Society for Maternal Charity, the most prominent organization of its kind. Administered by middle-class and elite women and financed by powerful families and the government, the Society offered support to poor mothers, helping them to nurse and encouraging them not to abandon their children. In Poverty, Charity, and Motherhood, Christine Adams traces the Society's key role in shaping notions of maternity and in shifting the care of poor families from the hands of charitable volunteers with religious-tinged social visions to paid welfare workers with secular goals such as population growth and patriotism. Adams plumbs the origin and ideology of the Society and its branches, showing how elite women in Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, Rouen, Marseille, Dijon, and Limoges tried to influence the maternal behavior of women and families with lesser financial means and social status. A deft analysis of the philosophy and goals of the Society details the members' own notions of good mothering, family solidarity, and legitimate marriages that structured official, elite, and popular attitudes concerning gender and poverty in France. These personal attitudes, Adams argues, greatly influenced public policy and shaped the country's burgeoning social welfare system.


"Richly detailed, well grounded in existing historiography, yet fully willing to challenge existing notions. . . . An excellent monograph with applications in a wide variety of national and transnational historical fields, as well as in the study of the history of childhood."--H-Childhood  
"Anyone who is interested in the history of the welfare state would do well to read it."--Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"An engaging story of the civic associations that women of privilege created and the ways in which women negotiated between their own expectations, public demands, and state interference."--H-France Review

  
"An absorbing and informative account of the largest and most important women's charity of its time."--French History

ISBN: 9780252035470

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm

Weight: unknown

280 pages