Popular belief and a particular conception of colonial history holds that women in New France had more opportunity to act in society. Josette Brun's analysis of married life and widowhood in eighteenth-century Quebec City and Louisbourg reveals another reality. Brun considers the division of rights and responsabilities between spouses, issues of morality and succession surrounding second marriages, strategies of economic survival, family support systems, and aid policies toward widowed individuals. She argues that husbands were "lords and masters" at home, a position legitimized by the state...
Popular belief and a particular conception of colonial history holds that women in New France had more opportunity to act in society. Josette Brun's a...
Following the death of their husbands, widows exploited a range of female roles, their professional experience, or a dower - assuming responsibility alone or with the help of their sons, sons-in-law, or nephews. This book locates the weeping widow, an obje
Following the death of their husbands, widows exploited a range of female roles, their professional experience, or a dower - assuming responsibility a...