Making Coal Sharp: Gendered Consumers and Users of Mineral Fuel in the 19th Century United States

Adams, Sean

Making Coal Sharp: Gendered Consumers and Users of Mineral Fuel in the 19th Century United States - 2021.


98

At the same time that urban American hearths and kitchens became dependent upon coal, proscriptive accounts of gendered domesticity grew in popularity. Buying coal was a man’s world, full of sharp dealings, underhanded sellers, and cutthroat competition. Using coal, on the other hand, was women’s work, in which emergent ideas of domestic economy placed an emphasis upon efficiency and order. Although these worlds were separate in theory, in actuality the use of coal blurred idealistic visions of a gendered division of labor in the home. “Making Coal Sharp” examines the ways in which industrial capitalism connected the hearth and kitchen to wider energy markets, while complicating an idealized gendered division of labor held dear by middle and upper-class American households as they negotiated this first major energy transition to fossil fuel use.

PLUDOC

PLUDOC est la plateforme unique et centralisée de gestion des bibliothèques physiques et numériques de Guinée administré par le CEDUST. Elle est la plus grande base de données de ressources documentaires pour les Étudiants, Enseignants chercheurs et Chercheurs de Guinée.

Adresse

627 919 101/664 919 101

25 boulevard du commerce
Kaloum, Conakry, Guinée

Réseaux sociaux

Powered by Netsen Group @ 2025