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Wheat and Woman is an important text in the history of western Canada. It remains the only published book-length account of a single woman farmer, a dynamic individual who challenged the conventions of her day, flouting definitions of appropriate possession and use of the land. She exemplified the potential choices that British women could make, but unlike the literary homesteaders of the United States, she did not romanticize the West as a place where single women could be freed from domesticity, drudgery, and poverty. Wheat and Woman revealed the extreme inequity of the homestead laws and the uneven distribution of power between men and women. Yet Binnie-Clark and others in the homesteads-for-women movement advocated the homestead rights of British and not all women. The book, and Binnie-Clark’s career, reminds us of how western Canada is a landscape profoundly shaped by ideas of gender, race, and empire.
—From the introduction to the 2006 edition by Sarah Carter
Used with permission.
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Subjects
Biography, Canada, Country life, Description and travel, Farmers, Fort Qu'appelle, Saskatchewan, Women farmersTimes
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Feedback?August 11, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | remove fake subjects |
March 28, 2011 | Edited by Lynn Anderson | After receiving permission from Sarah Carter I added a portion of her introduction to the 2006 edition of the book as the description. |
March 25, 2011 | Edited by 142.165.211.252 | I added a rough description of the book, hopefully . |
December 4, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Added subjects from MARC records. |
December 11, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |