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Processing discontent: Women's organizing and the Newfoundland Fishermen, Food and Allied Workers Union, 1971--1987.

机译:处理不满情绪:妇女组织和纽芬兰渔民,食品及同盟工人联盟,1971--1987年。

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摘要

This thesis aims to explore the motivations and processes underlying women's active organizing in the Newfoundland, Fishermen, Food and Allied Workers Union (NFFAW) during the 1970s and 1980s. Central to this interdisciplinary analysis is an exploration of how and why the organizational structure of the union produced a hierarchy of interests where the assumed gender neutrality of the collectivity obscured the exclusion of women's needs from the union's agenda. By identifying and questioning the gendered subtexts of the priorities and practices of the NFFAW, as well as the official discourses used to mobilize and promote the interests of the rank-and-file, I attempt to reveal the norms and assumptions which defined the scope and character of women's paid employment and labour organizing during this period. My focus is on understanding women and men's motivations for catering paid processing work, the hierarchical and gendered division of labour within fish plants, and the ideologies and discourses which informed and sustained these divisions. I provide evidence to suggest that, by the 1980s, collective identities had been fashioned from the common experiences of fishery employment in rural Newfoundland and that workplace cultures had not only emerged among workers, but had also fundamentally transformed women's strategies of workplace resistance. The formal and informal networks of understanding which emerged from these cultures were integral to subsequent efforts to address women's needs and promote 'feminist' process by establishing a Women's Committee within the NFFAW's formal leadership structure. I argue further that only through the processes of separate organizing were women able to collectively challenge the gender neutrality of union practices and processes, and articulate their gendered needs to the broader union membership.
机译:本文旨在探讨1970年代和1980年代在纽芬兰,渔民,食品和同盟工人联盟(NFFAW)中妇女积极组织的动机和过程。跨学科分析的核心是探索工会的组织结构如何以及为什么会产生利益等级,在这种情况下,假定的集体性别中立性阻碍了将妇女的需求排除在工会议程之外。通过识别和质疑NFFAW优先事项和实践的性别潜台词,以及动员和促进普通员工利益的官方话语,我试图揭示界定范围和原则的规范和假设。这一时期妇女有酬就业和劳动组织的特征。我的重点是理解男女从事有偿加工工作的动机,鱼类植物内部分工和性别分工,以及为这些分工提供信息并保持这种状态的意识形态和话语。我提供的证据表明,到1980年代,集体身份是根据纽芬兰农村地区渔业就业的共同经验而形成的,工作场所文化不仅在工人中出现,而且从根本上改变了妇女的工作场所抵抗策略。从这些文化中形成的正式和非正式的理解网络是随后努力解决妇女需求并通过在NFFAW的正式领导结构内建立妇女委员会来促进“女权主义”进程的组成部分。我进一步争辩说,只有通过单独组织的过程,妇女才能够集体挑战工会实践和进程的性别中立性,并向更广泛的工会会员明确表达其性别需求。

著录项

  • 作者

    Ignagni, Sandra.;

  • 作者单位

    Trent University (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 Trent University (Canada).;
  • 学科 Canadian Studies.
  • 学位 M.A.
  • 年度 2004
  • 页码 154 p.
  • 总页数 154
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 人口学;
  • 关键词

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