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Structure of Female Employment and Work in Brazil, 1920-1970

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Felicia R. Madeira
Affiliation:
Centro Brasilero de Analise e Planejamento, Rue Bahia, 499, São Paulo, Brazil
Paul Singer
Affiliation:
Centro Brasilero de Analise e Planejamento, Rue Bahia, 499, São Paulo, Brazil

Extract

Brazilian women have never been foreign to work. Prior to the beginning of the industrialization process, women were very active. The activities performed by women vary so much between different societies that it is not possible to assign or categorize any one activity as exclusively feminine. One of the principal characteristics of the development process of a society is the progressive isolation of those activities which are necessary for the production of goods and services from other activities. This is a consequence of the introduction of technological changes which make inevitable a separation in space and time of activities related to special production. The activity identified as work starts to develop more and more at specific places, in specific time intervals, and under specific contractual conditions. As the growing technical specialization made it necessary to make a separation between house and work, women were assigned house activities. In this sense it can be said that the introduction of the machine came to reinforce the concept that women's principal function was the administration of the house and the education of the children.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1975

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