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Accounting for the male domination through legislative empowerment of upper-middle class women in the early nineteenth century Spain

María Dolores Capelo Bernal (Economia Financiera y Contabilidad, Unversidad de Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain)
Pedro Araújo Pinzón (Economia Fananciera y Conta, Universidad de Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain)
Warwick Funnell (Kent Business School, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 21 May 2018

Issue publication date: 21 May 2018

711

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to address both the neglect of non-Anglo-centric accounting gendered practices beyond the predominant professional setting and the controversial roles of women and accounting in power relationships inside the household. Analyzing a Spanish upper-middle class Catholic family in the early nineteenth century, the research focuses on the reciprocal interaction of accounting with practices and processes of daily life in a rigid patriarchal socio-cultural and juridical context.

Design/methodology/approach

This microhistory draws upon several archives, including in Spain the Archivo Histórico Provincial de Cádiz. In England, the Bath Record Office has preserved documents and correspondence, both personal and business related, and the Worcester Record Office preserved notarial documents concerning the family. The large number of letters which have survived has facilitated an in-depth study of the people who were affected by accounting calculations.

Findings

In a juridical context where women were conceived as merely the means for the circulation of property between two families, the evidence shows that accounting provided the proof of women’s patrimony value and the means to facilitate their recovery in this cosification process. Although women had a little involvement in the household’s accounting and management, they demonstrated confidence in accounting, fulfilling a stewardship function for the resources received. Also, evidence shows that by using accounting practices to shield supposedly defenseless women, this reinforced male domination over women and promoted the view that the role of women was as an ornament and in need of a good husband.

Originality/value

Contrasting with the Anglo-Saxon contemporary context, the Spanish law preserved a woman’s property rights, guaranteeing recovery of properties owned by her before marriage should the marriage be legally annulled or be dissolved because one of the spouses’ death. This required a detailed accounting of the wife’s properties brought to her marriage, most especially regarding the dowry provided by her family.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to express their gratitude to the Bath Record Office and in particular to Sheila Metcalfe and Rosemary Boyns for their assistance for the transcription and the forwarding of the primary sources material. The authors would like to thank also Stephen Walker for his comments and acknowledge those received at the 22nd Accounting Business and Financial History Conference (September 2010), the XVII Konopka Workshop on Accounting and Management Control (February 2012) and the 7th Accounting History International Conference (September, 2013). This work has benefitted from financing supplied by research projects ECO2008-06052/ECON and SEJ-4129.

Citation

Bernal, M.D.C., Pinzón, P.A. and Funnell, W. (2018), "Accounting for the male domination through legislative empowerment of upper-middle class women in the early nineteenth century Spain", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 31 No. 4, pp. 1174-1198. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-04-2014-1664

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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