This is an incredibly thoughtful and thought-provoking study of how wage contracts displaced the social contract in American life. Contracts, at least ideally, represented choice and mutual benefit. The embrace of contract labor in the years around abolition separated labor and dependency—historically paired in the American imagination. However, while these arguments added to the case against slavery, they complicated the position of wage laborers and women in the rapidly expanding market economy. Stanley’s text problematizes the wage and marriage contract by examining the social role of the beggar and prostitute, who operated outside the contract system, in addition to those men and women who ‘successfully’ navigated contracts.
I found Stanley's discussion of marriage contracts, which create a relationship of status, and the early feminist efforts to reshape the marital relationship especially fascinating.
The text is fantastically written. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in gender, labor, and race in the US. The text focuses on the period immediately after the Civil War, but her insights illuminate the 20th century as well.