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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aGrenier, Benoît
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Ferland, Catherine
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Wittmeier, Melissa
_eauthor
245 0 0 _a“As Long as the Absence Shall Last”: Proxy Agreements and Women's Power in Eighteenth-Century Quebec City
260 _c2013.
500 _a12
520 _aIn pre-industrial societies, the exercise of power within the family was closely linked to the legal context and to patriarchal norms. The role played by women, particularly married women, in the family’s economic activity is often hidden from history. The study of women entitled to act by proxy in Quebec City, the capital of Nouvelle-France in the eighteenth century, allows a better understanding of the way the couple could function in a colonial context often characterized by the physical absence of males. The analysis of agreements authorizing wives to stand proxy for their husbands, combined with a prosopographical study, reveals the context and the issues at stake in this circumstantial transfer of power. This approach shows that it is possible to penetrate, at least in part, the silence of history concerning the activity of married women, and to shed light on the complex question of complementarity and trust within the couple.
690 _aproxy agreements
690 _aQuebec City
690 _aeighteenth century (1700-1765)
690 _acouple
690 _aNouvelle-France (Canada)
690 _afamily
690 _apower
690 _aProxy
690 _atrust
690 _acomplementarity
786 0 _nClio. Women, Gender, History | o. 37 | 1 | 2013-09-30 | p. 197-225 | 1252-7017
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-clio-women-gender-history-2013-1-page-197?lang=en
999 _c147954
_d147954