Description

Book Synopsis

This study examines the role of southern Italian women who remained behind when their husbands emigrated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By piecing together limited archival source material, the author argues that married women were not voiceless or powerless when their husbands were abroad, but they took on roles beyond their limited legal position. They petitioned local officials, requested passports, received remittances, and handled the family finances, all in the absence of their husbands, the legal head of the family. The study also emphasizes the connection forged between women and the new Italian state at a time when women did not have political rights. Centering on Basilicata—a “forgotten” region of the Italian south and one that has not been a major focus of scholarly investigation—this study challenges stereotypes that the Italian south was backwards, uncivilized, and lagging behind northern Italy. The author argues that large scale emigration greatly impacted the married women left behind in the villages of Basilicata, changing their social, political, and economic role.



Trade Review

Calabrese’s work is a timely reminder of the gendered dimension of transnational migration. By focusing on rural women in Basilicata, a seemingly isolated, rural world, Calabrese shows us the ways in which male emigration transformed the intimate and public lives of the married women who remained behind. Working from a wide range of government documents, Calabrese centers on the words and experiences of rural women as they navigated the intricacies of a transnational global network. This work highlights the ways rural women invoked the law, government agencies, and social norms to forge new roles for themselves within the family and the state.

-- Linda Reeder, University of Missouri

Italian Women in Basilicata creatively pieces together scant and scattered documentation with good results. It delivers vivid illustrations of how women’s confined civil status shaped their responses to male emigration, focusing on their persistent, small efforts to protect themselves as wives, mothers, and daughters.

-- Donna Gabaccia, University of Toronto

Victoria Calabrese paints a moving and nuanced portrait of women in Italy during the peak years of emigration from the south of the country. By investigating the legal, social, and religious implications of families separated by international migration, Calabrese explains continuity and change in gender relations, family structures, and community development. This book makes a significant contribution to women’s studies, migration studies, and Italian studies, with specific examples of women’s stories that readers will long remember.

-- Mark Choate, Brigham Young University

Table of Contents

Preface: A Woman Left Behind

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Women, Emigration, and Basilicata

Chapter 1: Marriage, Tradition, and Emigration

Chapter 2: Motherhood and Migration

Chapter 3: Women and Economic Change in an Era of Mass Migration

Chapter 4: Women and the State: Forging Citizenship

Chapter 5: Family, Community, and Church: Coping with Emigration

Chapter 6: Deviant Women: Criminal and Dishonorable Activity

Chapter 7: Returning Men and Emigrating Women

Conclusion

Bibliography

About the Author

Italian Women in Basilicata: Staying Behind but

    Product form

    £69.35

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £73.00 – you save £3.65 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Victoria Calabrese

    Out of stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Italian Women in Basilicata: Staying Behind but by Victoria Calabrese

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 26/01/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793607782, 978-1793607782
      ISBN10: 1793607788

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This study examines the role of southern Italian women who remained behind when their husbands emigrated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By piecing together limited archival source material, the author argues that married women were not voiceless or powerless when their husbands were abroad, but they took on roles beyond their limited legal position. They petitioned local officials, requested passports, received remittances, and handled the family finances, all in the absence of their husbands, the legal head of the family. The study also emphasizes the connection forged between women and the new Italian state at a time when women did not have political rights. Centering on Basilicata—a “forgotten” region of the Italian south and one that has not been a major focus of scholarly investigation—this study challenges stereotypes that the Italian south was backwards, uncivilized, and lagging behind northern Italy. The author argues that large scale emigration greatly impacted the married women left behind in the villages of Basilicata, changing their social, political, and economic role.



      Trade Review

      Calabrese’s work is a timely reminder of the gendered dimension of transnational migration. By focusing on rural women in Basilicata, a seemingly isolated, rural world, Calabrese shows us the ways in which male emigration transformed the intimate and public lives of the married women who remained behind. Working from a wide range of government documents, Calabrese centers on the words and experiences of rural women as they navigated the intricacies of a transnational global network. This work highlights the ways rural women invoked the law, government agencies, and social norms to forge new roles for themselves within the family and the state.

      -- Linda Reeder, University of Missouri

      Italian Women in Basilicata creatively pieces together scant and scattered documentation with good results. It delivers vivid illustrations of how women’s confined civil status shaped their responses to male emigration, focusing on their persistent, small efforts to protect themselves as wives, mothers, and daughters.

      -- Donna Gabaccia, University of Toronto

      Victoria Calabrese paints a moving and nuanced portrait of women in Italy during the peak years of emigration from the south of the country. By investigating the legal, social, and religious implications of families separated by international migration, Calabrese explains continuity and change in gender relations, family structures, and community development. This book makes a significant contribution to women’s studies, migration studies, and Italian studies, with specific examples of women’s stories that readers will long remember.

      -- Mark Choate, Brigham Young University

      Table of Contents

      Preface: A Woman Left Behind

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction: Women, Emigration, and Basilicata

      Chapter 1: Marriage, Tradition, and Emigration

      Chapter 2: Motherhood and Migration

      Chapter 3: Women and Economic Change in an Era of Mass Migration

      Chapter 4: Women and the State: Forging Citizenship

      Chapter 5: Family, Community, and Church: Coping with Emigration

      Chapter 6: Deviant Women: Criminal and Dishonorable Activity

      Chapter 7: Returning Men and Emigrating Women

      Conclusion

      Bibliography

      About the Author

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account