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- Title
Women in the Formal and Informal Economies of Late Eighteenth-Century Quebec, 1763-1830.
- Authors
Christie, Nancy
- Abstract
This article challenges the conventional interpretation of the transition from French to British rule in Quebec, which has emphasised the increasing marginalisation of women in the colonial economy. Using hitherto unexplored criminal and civil court records and newspaper advertisements, reveals that women and in particular married women, both French and English speaking, were active in all facets of business life. Given the importance of imported British luxury items in the colonial economy following the American Revolution, this article argues that women occupied a particularly dynamic segment of business life in Quebec, and were especially prominent in the critical textile and fashion trades. A major theme of this article is to show the significance of informal trade networks in expanding economic development in the late eighteenth century, where women were demonstrably key players. The presence of women in both formal and formal economies goes far to locating Quebec in a burgeoning Atlantic economy, and to explaining the nature of consumer society in this new British colony.
- Subjects
QUEBEC (Province); CANADA; WOMEN; WOMEN merchants; MERCHANTS; ECONOMIC conditions of women; INFORMAL sector; COURTS; HISTORY; ECONOMIC history
- Publication
Gender & History, 2017, Vol 29, Issue 1, p104
- ISSN
0953-5233
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1468-0424.12280