Narratives at Work: Women, Men, Unionization, and the Fashioning of Identities
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Cullum, Linda K (Author)
 
Title
            Narratives at Work: Women, Men, Unionization, and the Fashioning of Identities
        Abstract
            In February, 1948, a group of fish and blueberry processors formed the exclusively female, Ladies' Cold Storage Workers Union at Job Brothers fish plant in St. John's, Newfoundland. Unusual for the time, this organization was founded in the context of structural and social change in the Newfoundland fishery that altered the social relations of paid and unpaid work for women fish plant labourers. Cullum carefully explores this specific labour process and provides an open reading of the workers' narratives; a study of how the women of Job Brothers recounted stories of their work and domestic lives, and thus fashioned shifting identities as gendered, classed, and racialized subjects. --Publisher's description
        Series
            Social and economic studies (St. John's, NL)
        Volume
            68
        Place
            St. John's, NL
        Publisher
            Memorial University Press, Institute of Social and Economic Research
        Date
            2003
        # of Pages
            383 pages: illustrations
        Language
            English
        ISBN
            978-0-919666-54-2
        Extra
            OCLC: 757391847
        Citation
            Cullum, L. K. (2003). Narratives at Work: Women, Men, Unionization, and the Fashioning of Identities (Vol. 68). Memorial University Press, Institute of Social and Economic Research. https://memorialuniversitypress.ca/Books/N/Narratives-at-Work
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