Women and Social Class: International Feminist PerspectivesChristine Zmroczek, Pat Mahony This volume presents debates on class within an international context. Its particular focus is on women's theorized experience of social class from a variety of feminist perspectives, contextualized in relation to the countries and regions in which they live. Using personal experience as a basis, contributors cover Australia, Bangladesh, Botswana, Britain, Canada, Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic, India, Israel, Korea, New Zealand, Poland, and the USA - iluminating the differences and similarities between regions.; Challenging the view that "class is dead" as well as the idea that it is a British phenomenon, the book argues that class needs to be regarded as a key concept in any attempt to understand women's lives. It also reflects on personal and political experiences of class around the world in order to understand the mechanisms through which class discrimination operates and is mediated by gender, sexuality, ethnicity and racism. |
Contents
What does it mean to be a middleclass woman in Botswana? | 9 |
The new Hebrews new woman growing up Israeli and middleclass | 25 |
Who am I? A journey across class and identity | 37 |
Class attainment and sexuality in late twentiethcentury Britain | 51 |
Women in and after a classless society | 69 |
Class gender and ethnicity snapshots of a mixed heritage | 85 |
Class matters Yes it does | 105 |
Coming out | 115 |
Personal reflections from the margins an interface with race class nation and gender | 145 |
Owning up to being middle class race gender and class in the context of migration | 157 |
Officially known as other multiethnic identities and class status | 167 |
You nurtured me to be a carefree bird O Mother | 185 |
Genealogies of class | 199 |
Questioning correspondence an Australian womans account of the effects of social mobility on subjective class consciousness | 211 |
Spilling the caviar telling privileged class tales | 225 |
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Other editions - View all
Women and Social Class: International Feminist Perspectives Pat Mahony,Christine Zmroczek Limited preview - 2004 |
Women and Social Class: International Feminist Perspectives Pat Mahony,Christine Zmroczek Limited preview - 2004 |
Women and Social Class: International Feminist Perspectives Pat Mahony,Christine Zmroczek No preview available - 1999 |
Common terms and phrases
academic Ashkenazi Asian Australia Bangladesh became Botswana Britain British caste cent chapter Christine class and gender class background class position communist context culture Czech domestic workers economic elite ethnicity example experiences of class father feel feminism feminist feminist theory friends Gaborone gender Havelková higher education identity Ikalanga immigrants important Indian inequalities Israeli issues Jewish labour lesbian lived London Mahony male marriage married middle middle-class middle-class girls middle-class women migration Mizrahis mother never oppression parents Poland policies Polish political privileged class professional race racial racism relations relationship religion role Routledge sense Setswana sexuality social class society Spinifex status szlachta teachers teaching theories tion traditional Tswana understand University of Botswana upper-class Walkerdine woman women's studies workers working-class working-class background working-class women writing young Zmroczek
Popular passages
Page 233 - For feminist researchers, females are worth examining as individuals and people whose experience is interwoven with other women. In other words, feminists are interested in women as individuals and as a social category, (Reinharz, 1992: 24) Feminist gerontology is now recognising this in relation to older women.
Page 233 - Class is not just about the way you talk, or dress, or furnish your home; it is not just about the job you do or how much money you make doing it; nor is it merely about whether or not you have A levels or went to university, nor which university you went to.
