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The Plywood Girls: Women and Gender Ideology at the Port Alberni Plywood Plant, 1942-1991
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Klausen, Susanne (Author)
Title
            The Plywood Girls: Women and Gender Ideology at the Port Alberni Plywood Plant, 1942-1991
        Abstract
            Created in January 1942 to supply war materials to the Canadian military, the Port Alberni, British Columbia, plywood mill was a haven for women mill workers. Many of the women who worked at Alberni Plywoods moved to the Vancouver Island town from Canada's economically depressed Prairie Provinces. Although women comprised four-fifths of the mill's work force by January 1943, women were largely excluded from the skilled positions at the plant. A gender-based hierarchy remained in place throughout the war, with men in the supervisory and high-skill roles, and women concentrated in unskilled positions. After the war, the mill did not expel its female workforce, but it hired only males.
        Publication
            Labour / Le Travail
        Volume
            41
        Pages
            199-235
        Date
            Spring 1998
        Journal Abbr
            Labour / Le Travail
        ISSN
            07003862
        Accessed
            4/27/15, 3:57 PM
        Citation
            Klausen, S. (1998). The Plywood Girls: Women and Gender Ideology at the Port Alberni Plywood Plant, 1942-1991. Labour / Le Travail, 41, 199–235. http://www.lltjournal.ca/index.php/llt/issue/view/493
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