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Women's History and Working-Class History

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Women's History and Working-Class History
Abstract
This paper seeks to examine the extent to which the writing of the history of both women and of the Canadian working class has converged over the last ten years, to suggest other ways in which integration of the two could be sought, and also to suggest some basic conflicts between the paradigms of each which point to areas where integration seems unlikely. It argues that if the goal of writing a history of the totality of the working class is a shared one, areas of intersection between the two fields must be consciously sought out. New ways of integrating the history of women and of the working class must be sought. For a start, this requires a reconceptualization of the way we define the working class and work, examination of the processes of class reproduction, and acknowledgement of the importance of examining how gender definitions are transmitted, shaped and reshaped.
Publication
Labour / Le Travail
Date
Spring 1987
Volume
19
Pages
23-43
Journal Abbr
Labour / Le Travail
Citation Key
bradburyWomensHistoryWorkingClass1987
Accessed
8/20/15, 5:35 PM
ISSN
07003862
Citation
Bradbury, B. (1987). Women’s History and Working-Class History. Labour / Le Travail, 19, 23–43. http://www.lltjournal.ca/index.php/llt/article/view/2395