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The crofter is a woman: : Gender division of labour in rural semi-landless households, Sweden 1800-1900

Uppenberg, Carolina and Nilsson, Malin LU orcid (2023) In Lund Papers in Economic History p.1-34
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to contribute to the empirical question of the labour organisation and the gender division of labour in a semi-landless rural group, crofters (Swedish torpare), during the nineteenth century, and thereby also add to the larger question of the role of gender division of labour in the formation of a wagedependent class. The crofters’ households performed contract-defined corvée labour (unpaid duties as payment for the croft) for the landowner alongside subsistence work at their own croft. We triangulated crofters’ contracts, work lists from estate archives and ethnographic questionnaires to understand the gender division of labour on the estates and at the crofts. The results show that men performed a much higher... (More)
The aim of this paper is to contribute to the empirical question of the labour organisation and the gender division of labour in a semi-landless rural group, crofters (Swedish torpare), during the nineteenth century, and thereby also add to the larger question of the role of gender division of labour in the formation of a wagedependent class. The crofters’ households performed contract-defined corvée labour (unpaid duties as payment for the croft) for the landowner alongside subsistence work at their own croft. We triangulated crofters’ contracts, work lists from estate archives and ethnographic questionnaires to understand the gender division of labour on the estates and at the crofts. The results show that men performed a much higher number of corvée days per year compared to women. We found a positive correlation between men’s and women’s corvee days, meaning that crofts with the highest number of corvée days for men also had the highest number for women. Moreover, we found that many core agricultural tasks were done by both men and women. The labour organisation, on the other hand, was clearly gendered – the role as a crofter in the sense of doing corvée labour for a landowner was primarily a male experience, while the role as a crofter in the sense of working one’s own small plot of land was a female experience. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Working paper/Preprint
publication status
published
subject
keywords
gender division of labour, proletarianization, semi-landless households, crofters, torpare, estates, Sweden, nineteenth century, N53
in
Lund Papers in Economic History
issue
2023:253
pages
1 - 34
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
12b6be2f-aa83-49a6-a5ca-4cb6797a2762
date added to LUP
2023-09-18 14:58:40
date last changed
2023-10-24 09:34:00
@misc{12b6be2f-aa83-49a6-a5ca-4cb6797a2762,
  abstract     = {{The aim of this paper is to contribute to the empirical question of the labour organisation and the gender division of labour in a semi-landless rural group, crofters (Swedish torpare), during the nineteenth century, and thereby also add to the larger question of the role of gender division of labour in the formation of a wagedependent class. The crofters’ households performed contract-defined corvée labour (unpaid duties as payment for the croft) for the landowner alongside subsistence work at their own croft. We triangulated crofters’ contracts, work lists from estate archives and ethnographic questionnaires to understand the gender division of labour on the estates and at the crofts. The results show that men performed a much higher number of corvée days per year compared to women. We found a positive correlation between men’s and women’s corvee days, meaning that crofts with the highest number of corvée days for men also had the highest number for women. Moreover, we found that many core agricultural tasks were done by both men and women. The labour organisation, on the other hand, was clearly gendered – the role as a crofter in the sense of doing corvée labour for a landowner was primarily a male experience, while the role as a crofter in the sense of working one’s own small plot of land was a female experience.}},
  author       = {{Uppenberg, Carolina and Nilsson, Malin}},
  keywords     = {{gender division of labour; proletarianization; semi-landless households; crofters; torpare; estates; Sweden; nineteenth century; N53}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Working Paper}},
  number       = {{2023:253}},
  pages        = {{1--34}},
  series       = {{Lund Papers in Economic History}},
  title        = {{The crofter is a woman: : Gender division of labour in rural semi-landless households, Sweden 1800-1900}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/158847957/LUPEH_253.pdf}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}