《世界上最好的工作》:十九世纪和二十世纪初英国煤矿业中的养家糊口与家庭劳动俘获

‘The Best Job in the World’: Breadwinning and the Capture of Household Labor in Nineteenth and Early Twentieth-Century British Coalmining

Feminist Economics · 2022
被引 11
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

利用英国历史证据,揭示煤矿家庭中男性养家糊口模式掩盖的真相:所有家庭成员都融入煤炭生产,妇女的无偿劳动不仅提供家务,还转移了妇女和儿童的福祉给男性,并增加了煤矿公司利润,这有助于解释前煤矿区持续贫困的原因。

Abstract

This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of historical coalmining. Across the United States and Europe, ex-coalmining regions are characterized by significant deprivation. While there are many reasons for persistent problems, this study focuses on the restrictions imposed on women's involvement in economic life. Families in mining communities exemplified the male breadwinner structure, in which men's earnings supported wives and children who provided domestic services in return. Using evidence from Britain, this article exposes a different reality of household economics characterized by dominance and subordination: All family members were integrated into the coalmining production process and the creation of profit. Women's unpaid work did not simply provide domestic comfort; it transferred well-being from women and children to men and simultaneously contributed to the colliery companies’ profits. These findings revise accounts of mining families while explaining the intransigence of deprivation in ex-coalmining areas.HIGHLIGHTS Women's disempowerment in historical mining communities had adverse effects that persist today.Pit women's labor propped up profits and wages and discouraged infrastructure investment.Breadwinning secured increased leisure time and higher income for men not women.Hours and incomes of “double shift”” factory women compare favorably to pit women.Regeneration must confront the gendered identities embedded in ex-mining communities.

性别不平等女性赋权家庭劳动煤矿社区