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Gender, Work, and Working-Class Women's Culture in the Veracruz Coffee Export Industry, 1920–1945

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2004

Heather Fowler-Salamini
Affiliation:
Bradley University

Abstract

This article highlights the heterogeneity within the Mexican women's labor force after the 1910 Mexican Revolution by profiling the coffee sorters in the Central Veracruz export industry. It contends that working women were not entirely subordinated to the patriarchal culture usually found in the workplace despite the seasonal and low-skilled nature of their work. Their work experience, ability to support their families, and the new social networks on and off the shop floor contributed to the shaping of their dual identity as women and as workers. In their life histories, these working women sought to construct an alternative working-class women's culture based on the meaning and importance of women's work, which reconfigured provincial conceptions of gender and class.

Type
Gender, the Working Class, and the History of the Post–Revolutionary State in Mexico
Copyright
© 2003 The International Labor and Working-Class History Society

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