To Her Credit: Women, Finance, and the Law in Eighteenth-Century New England Cities by Sara T. Damiano (review)

IF 1.1 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Jacqueline Beatty
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Damiano suggests in To Her Credit, the two used the playing card to legitimate Wickham's debt to Stoneman in the midst of a game in her establishment. This small piece of paper functioned beyond its intended purpose, at once an integral component of a tavern game, a record of a financial transaction, and a legally binding document. Damiano's analysis of this seemingly quotidian primary source encapsulates her findings on women's financial and legal activities in two eighteenth-century British North American port cities. It is precisely the card's mundanity that signals one of the most important conclusions of her work: free white women were present, involved, and active in eighteenth-century financial and legal affairs. Far from merely recovering the presence of women in those interactions, Damiano underscores the fact that few contemporaries questioned women's financial activities unless they perceived they might benefit from doing so. Importantly, too, \"as long as married women's labor and decisions remained uncontroversial, financial and legal records obscured femes covert or subordinated them to their husbands\" (30). Thus, the very prevalence of women's financial activities has obfuscated a full historical and historiographical accounting of their presence in the early American political economy. Damiano's work remedies this problem. In To Her Credit, Damiano deftly demonstrates that women were central, critical, and relatively commonplace figures in financial transactions, regularly engaging in negotiations over credit and debt. They appeared both within and outside of the courtroom, in formal and informal ways. Their financial activities were simultaneously \"heterosocial and profoundly gendered\" (5). Indeed, this study underscores the complexities of the urban economy's influence on gendered spaces in the eighteenth century. The household had significant financial dimensions—such as debt agreements negotiated in homes with family members acting as witnesses—making the public sphere far less masculine in its contours than researchers have conceded even recently. Along with scholars such as Laura F. Edwards and Kirsten Sword, Damiano complicates our understanding of coverture's [End Page 772] impact on women's daily lives.1 William Blackstone's 1765 Commentaries, for example, long cited by historians discussing femes covert, diverged from his contemporaries' legal analyses by displaying a distinctly conservative view of the position of women.2 To Her Credit thus urges us to be more careful in the weight we give coverture, particularly Blackstone's portrayal of it, in shaping interpretations of women's financial agency. 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Abstract

Reviewed by: To Her Credit: Women, Finance, and the Law in Eighteenth-Century New England Cities by Sara T. Damiano Jacqueline Beatty To Her Credit: Women, Finance, and the Law in Eighteenth-Century New England Cities. By Sara T. Damiano. Studies in Early American Economy and Society from the Library Company of Philadelphia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021. 309 pages. Cloth, ebook. On the reverse of a hand-drawn nine of clubs, Benjamin Wickham signed a short promissory note guaranteeing that he would pay Abigail Stoneman, a Newport, Rhode Island, tavernkeeper, the thirteen pounds he owed her. In all likelihood, as Sara T. Damiano suggests in To Her Credit, the two used the playing card to legitimate Wickham's debt to Stoneman in the midst of a game in her establishment. This small piece of paper functioned beyond its intended purpose, at once an integral component of a tavern game, a record of a financial transaction, and a legally binding document. Damiano's analysis of this seemingly quotidian primary source encapsulates her findings on women's financial and legal activities in two eighteenth-century British North American port cities. It is precisely the card's mundanity that signals one of the most important conclusions of her work: free white women were present, involved, and active in eighteenth-century financial and legal affairs. Far from merely recovering the presence of women in those interactions, Damiano underscores the fact that few contemporaries questioned women's financial activities unless they perceived they might benefit from doing so. Importantly, too, "as long as married women's labor and decisions remained uncontroversial, financial and legal records obscured femes covert or subordinated them to their husbands" (30). Thus, the very prevalence of women's financial activities has obfuscated a full historical and historiographical accounting of their presence in the early American political economy. Damiano's work remedies this problem. In To Her Credit, Damiano deftly demonstrates that women were central, critical, and relatively commonplace figures in financial transactions, regularly engaging in negotiations over credit and debt. They appeared both within and outside of the courtroom, in formal and informal ways. Their financial activities were simultaneously "heterosocial and profoundly gendered" (5). Indeed, this study underscores the complexities of the urban economy's influence on gendered spaces in the eighteenth century. The household had significant financial dimensions—such as debt agreements negotiated in homes with family members acting as witnesses—making the public sphere far less masculine in its contours than researchers have conceded even recently. Along with scholars such as Laura F. Edwards and Kirsten Sword, Damiano complicates our understanding of coverture's [End Page 772] impact on women's daily lives.1 William Blackstone's 1765 Commentaries, for example, long cited by historians discussing femes covert, diverged from his contemporaries' legal analyses by displaying a distinctly conservative view of the position of women.2 To Her Credit thus urges us to be more careful in the weight we give coverture, particularly Blackstone's portrayal of it, in shaping interpretations of women's financial agency. This work sits at the intersection of scholarship on women's place in the political economy and the courtroom in early America.3 Damiano's study demonstrates the need for historians to consider more nuanced, often contradictory, conclusions in their analyses. She neither adopts a declension model nor overemphasizes the significance of advancements for women. Rather, she finds both "persistence and change" (173) in women's financial activities during the "final two-thirds of the eighteenth century" (3). On the one hand, she argues, women's position as creditors often gave them power over men in their communities; and on the other hand, their position as debtors made them acutely vulnerable. The same, of course, could be argued of men: one's position as a creditor gave one power, and being a debtor made one vulnerable to abuses of that power. Damiano investigates women's financial activities in Boston, Massachusetts, and Newport, Rhode Island, two bustling port cities whose residents were "especially conversant in the workings of the law" and whose "legal activities inside and outside of court were closely intertwined" (11). The author examines more than 800 petitions...
《值得赞扬:18世纪新英格兰城市的女性、金融和法律》萨拉·t·达米亚诺著
作者:萨拉·t·达米亚诺·杰奎琳·比蒂《她的功劳:18世纪新英格兰城市中的女性、金融与法律》萨拉·t·达米亚诺著。费城图书馆公司早期美国经济与社会研究。巴尔的摩:约翰霍普金斯大学出版社,2021。309页。布,电子书。在一张手绘的梅花九的背面,本杰明·维克汉姆签了一张简短的本票,保证他将付给罗得岛州纽波特的酒馆老板阿比盖尔·斯通曼欠她的13英镑。正如萨拉·t·达米亚诺(Sara T. Damiano)在《值得赞扬》(To Her Credit)一书中所言,很有可能,两人在她的公司里玩游戏时,用这张牌来证明维克汉姆欠斯通曼的债是正当的。这张小纸片的功能超出了它的预期目的,它既是酒馆游戏的组成部分,也是金融交易的记录,也是具有法律约束力的文件。Damiano对这一看似平凡的主要来源的分析概括了她对18世纪英属北美两个港口城市女性金融和法律活动的研究结果。正是这张卡片的平民性标志着她的工作中最重要的结论之一:自由的白人妇女在场,参与并活跃于18世纪的金融和法律事务中。达米亚诺强调了一个事实,即几乎没有同时代的人质疑女性的金融活动,除非她们认为这样做可能会从中受益。同样重要的是,“只要已婚妇女的劳动和决定没有争议,财务和法律记录掩盖了妇女隐蔽或从属于她们的丈夫”(30)。因此,女性金融活动的普遍存在,使得对她们在早期美国政治经济中存在的完整的历史和史学描述变得模糊。Damiano的研究弥补了这个问题。在《值得赞扬》一书中,达米亚诺巧妙地展示了女性在金融交易中是核心的、关键的、相对普通的角色,她们经常参与信贷和债务的谈判。他们以正式和非正式的方式出现在法庭内外。他们的金融活动同时是“异社会和深刻的性别”(5)。事实上,这项研究强调了18世纪城市经济对性别空间影响的复杂性。家庭有重要的经济维度——比如在家庭中由家庭成员作为证人协商的债务协议——使得公共领域的轮廓远不如研究人员最近承认的那样男性化。达米亚诺与劳拉·f·爱德华兹(Laura F. Edwards)和克尔斯滕·斯伯(Kirsten Sword)等学者一起,使我们对女性日常生活中女性形象影响的理解变得更加复杂例如,威廉·布莱克斯通(William Blackstone)在1765年出版的《评注》(Commentaries),长期被历史学家引用,讨论女性的秘密,与同时代的法律分析不同,它对女性地位的看法明显保守因此,值得赞扬的是,在塑造对女性金融机构的解释时,我们应该更加小心地赋予女性的地位,尤其是黑石对女性的描述。这本书是关于早期美国女性在政治经济和法庭中的地位的学术研究的交叉点。达米亚诺的研究表明,历史学家需要在他们的分析中考虑更细微的、往往是相互矛盾的结论。她既没有采用衰退模型,也没有过分强调女性进步的重要性。相反,她在“18世纪最后三分之二的时间”中发现了女性金融活动的“坚持和变化”(173)。她认为,一方面,女性作为债权人的地位往往赋予了她们在社区中强于男性的权力;另一方面,他们作为债务人的地位使他们非常脆弱。当然,同样的道理也适用于人:一个人作为债权人的地位赋予了他权力,而作为债务人的地位使他容易被滥用这种权力。达米亚诺调查了马萨诸塞州波士顿市和罗德岛州纽波特市的女性金融活动,这两个繁忙的港口城市的居民“特别熟悉法律的运作”,他们的“法庭内外的法律活动紧密交织在一起”(11)。作者审查了800多份请愿书。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
52
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