Some responses to economic change in Scottish farming and crofting family life, 1900–25 |
| |
Authors: | Claire Toynbee Lynn Jamieson |
| |
Abstract: | Our investigation of some of the processes involved in the emergence of ‘the modern family’is based on evidence from oral histories conducted with people who grew up in Scottish farming and crofting families in the early decades of the century. After showing how peasant and capitalist modes of production shaped both family structures and strategies for getting a living, we examine some of the ways in which the encroachments of the cash economy helped create new forms of gendered inequalities. Our discussion concludes with an analysis of recent papers concerned with the ways in which families are embedded in community life and the implications for long term change in authority structures. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|