Drawing on comparative labor history and feminist theory, this important study traces the history of women as industrial workers and trade unionists in South Africa during most of the twentieth century.
Drawing on comparative labor history and feminist theory, this important study traces the history of women as industrial workers and trade unionists in South Africa during most of the twentieth century.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
IRIS BERGER is Associate Professor of History, African Studies, and Women's Studies and Director of the Institute for Research on Women at the State University of New York at Albany. She is author of the award-winning book Religion and Resistance: East African Kingdoms in the Precolonial Period and co-editor (with Claire Robertson) of Women and Class in Africa.
Inhaltsangabe
PREFACE ABBREVIATIONS I. GENDER AND INDUSTRIALIZATION 1. Gender, Community, and Working-Class History 2. Dependency and Domesticity: Women's Wage Labor, 1900-1925 II. WOMEN IN THE NEW INDUSTRIAL UNIONS 3. Patterns of Women's Labor, 1925-1940 4. Daughters of the Depression 5. Commandos of Working Women 6. A Lengthening Thread III. A NEW WORKING CLASS AND THE CHALLENGE OF DEVERSITY 7. Nimble Fingers and Keen Eysight: Women in Wartime Production 8. A New Working Class, 1940-1960 9.Solidarity Fragmented: Garment Workers in the Transvaal 10. Food and Canning Workers at the Cape: The Structure of Gender and Race 11. Standing United 12. Never Far from Home: Family, Community, and Working Women IV.DECENTRALIZATION AND THE RISE OF INDEPENDENT UNIONS 13. City and Periphery, 1960-1980 14. Repression and Resistance Epilogue: Common Threads, Past and Present Notes Documentary Sources and Interviews Index Illustrations precede Chapter 8
PREFACE ABBREVIATIONS I. GENDER AND INDUSTRIALIZATION 1. Gender, Community, and Working-Class History 2. Dependency and Domesticity: Women's Wage Labor, 1900-1925 II. WOMEN IN THE NEW INDUSTRIAL UNIONS 3. Patterns of Women's Labor, 1925-1940 4. Daughters of the Depression 5. Commandos of Working Women 6. A Lengthening Thread III. A NEW WORKING CLASS AND THE CHALLENGE OF DEVERSITY 7. Nimble Fingers and Keen Eysight: Women in Wartime Production 8. A New Working Class, 1940-1960 9.Solidarity Fragmented: Garment Workers in the Transvaal 10. Food and Canning Workers at the Cape: The Structure of Gender and Race 11. Standing United 12. Never Far from Home: Family, Community, and Working Women IV.DECENTRALIZATION AND THE RISE OF INDEPENDENT UNIONS 13. City and Periphery, 1960-1980 14. Repression and Resistance Epilogue: Common Threads, Past and Present Notes Documentary Sources and Interviews Index Illustrations precede Chapter 8
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