Women of the Fields: Gender, Labor, and the History of Farming
MTA
A study of women's roles, leadership, and labor in agriculture across cultures and eras
2nd Edition
*Women of the Fields: Gender, Labor, and the History of Farming* offers a comprehensive and deeply researched examination of women's indispensable, yet historically undervalued, contributions to agriculture across millennia and cultures. The book argues that agriculture, in all its forms—from early cultivation and subsistence economies to complex pastoral systems, fisheries, and modern industrialized farms—has fundamentally relied on women's labor, knowledge, and leadership. However, their roles have been consistently marginalized, rendered invisible by patriarchal narratives, discriminatory legal frameworks, and gender-blind development policies.
The study traces women's involvement from the dawn of agriculture, highlighting their roles as "knowledge keepers" in seed selection, soil management, and agroecological practices. It exposes how colonial agrarian orders and plantation economies brutally exploited female labor, leading to "double burdens" of field work and social reproduction. Subsequent chapters delve into the impacts of mechanization and the Green Revolution, which often displaced women or exposed them to new hazards like pesticides, while formal extension services and financial institutions largely ignored their needs. The book reveals how legal systems, particularly concerning land tenure and inheritance, have systematically denied women ownership, thereby limiting their access to credit and their ability to invest in their farms.
Despite these systemic challenges, the book emphasizes women's profound resilience and agency. It details their leadership in organizing cooperatives, forming mutual aid networks, and spearheading movements for land rights, food sovereignty, and ethical sourcing. It also highlights the intricate intersections of gender with race, caste, class, age, and disability, demonstrating how these overlapping identities compound marginalization and shape women's unique experiences in agriculture. The text critiques traditional measurement methods that fail to capture women's full economic contributions, advocating for gender-responsive budgeting and disaggregated data to inform more equitable policies.
Ultimately, *Women of the Fields* is a call to action for an "equity-centered transition" toward just and sustainable food systems. It argues that recognizing and valuing women's historical and ongoing contributions is not merely an act of historical correction but a strategic imperative for addressing pressing global challenges like climate change, food insecurity, and rural poverty. The book concludes by outlining pathways for a future where technology serves all farmers, women have secure rights and economic justice, and their diverse knowledge and leadership are central to cultivating harvests that are truly just for everyone.
This book is for anyone interested in food systems, gender studies, history, and social justice. It is particularly valuable for academics, policymakers, development practitioners, and advocates working on rural development, agricultural policy, women's empowerment, and climate change. Readers seeking a nuanced and intersectional understanding of who truly feeds the world will find this an essential resource.
January 15, 2026
88,984 words
6 hours 14 minutes
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