About This Book
The work surveys the changing social position of women from early communal arrangements through the rise of patriarchal institutions, Christianity, and later social orders, examining legal, economic, and cultural forces that shaped marriage, family forms, prostitution, labor, education, and civil rights. It analyzes demographic and economic pressures, the commodification of marriage, and the exploitation of female labor, and traces women's struggles for legal and political equality and access to professions. The argument connects gender injustice to class and economic structures and contends that systemic social reorganization is required to achieve full emancipation for women.
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