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Title: SOSC 102U


1
SOSC 102U
  • Lecture Note 3
  • Gendered Work in Time and Place

2
The Sexual Division of Labor in Preindustrial
Europe (1)
  • Agricultural Work
  • Mens work plow, threshed, harvest, build
    houses, hew timer, harrow, dug ditch, and cut
    hedges
  • Womens work weed, harvest, raise domestic
    animals (milk, churn butter, make cheese and
    butcher these animals), make bread, beer, cloth
    and clothing.
  • Manufacturing Work
  • Men in manufacturing substantially earned more
    than women and enjoyed more autonomy.
  • Womens workshops most female labor in these
    workhouses were slaves of nobility or the
    monasteries or the wives and children of slaves.
    Others were serfs or prisons. They received their
    board and room in exchange for their labor. These
    womens workshops became extinct before
    industrialization.
  • Artisans almost all artisans were men. They
    earned an income from the products they made and
    sold.

3
The Sexual Division of Labor in Preindustrial
Europe (2)
  • Cottage industry (or putting-out system) before
    industrialization, women and children
    manufactured some goods at home through a system
    of cottage industry.

Source Cited from Gerhard Lenski, Jean Lenski,
Patrick Nolan, Human Societies An Introduction
to Macrosociology (New York McGraw-Hill, 1991),
p. 228.
4
The Industrial Revolution
  • Major impact on the sexual division of labor the
    changing economic role of a householdFamily
    production was replaced by market production in
    which capitalists paid workers wages to produce
    goods in factories and mines.
  • Labor force people work for pay or actively
    seek paid work
  • 1. Wage workers
  • 2. Unemployed persons
  • 3. Nonemployed not privileged classes who can be
    exempt from productive work but a growing group
    of unpaid workers. They cooked and cleaned for
    family members, raised children, cared for sick
    relatives, and provided social and emotional
    support to family, friends and community.
  • The distinction between paid work in the labor
    market and unpaid domestic work by the
    nonemployed has important consequences for
    gender inequality, because for the past 200
    years, men have been more likely than women to
    belong to the labor force, and women have been
    more likely than men to be unpaid workers
    (Padavic and Reskin, p. 20)

5
Textiles Works in Halstead, England, 1825
  • Based on Carol Adams, Paula Bartley, Judy Lown,
    Cathy Loxton, Under Control Life in a
    Nineteenth-century Silk Factory (Cambridge
    University Press, 1983)
  • Case study in Samuel Courtaulds silk mill in
    1825, Halstead, Essex (Southeast England)
  • Compare the wages for mens jobs compared with
    the pay for the womens jobs (p. 17)


6
Wages of Male Workers in Courtauld

7
Wages of Female Workers in Courtauld
8
The Sexual Division of Labor between Paid and
Unpaid Work (1)
  • The labor force became increasingly male
    throughout the nineteenth century (the
    masculinization of labor force)
  • Urbanization and the fall of womens labor force
  • Statistics in the U. S.
  • 1840 40 industrial workforce was contributed by
    women and children
  • 1890 only 17 of women was in the labor force
  • Protective labor laws institutionalize the
    masculinization of labor force

9
The Sexual Division of Labor between Paid and
Unpaid Work (2)
  • The interplay between gender and class
    inequality
  • Upper and middle-class family The Ideology of
    Separate Spheres Workplace vs. Family Life
  • But labor force participation was a necessity for
    the poor and working-class women. The ideology of
    separate spheres hurt working-class wives, whose
    families need to be supported by double incomes.
    Many working-class women therefore took up the
    work such as doing piecework or taking in
    laundry, sewing, or boarders to earn money at
    home. The work usually has lower pay and longer
    working hour than a real job.
  • The ideology changed after the 1970s, when the
    gap between mens and womens labor force
    participation rates narrowed considerably.

10
Question
  • According to Padavic and Reskin, womens
    participation in unpaid domestic work (the
    nonemployed work) has serious consequence to
    gender inequality, would their status be improved
    by increasing their contribution to household
    income?

11
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(1)
  • Based on Kathy L. M. Walker, Economic Growth,
    Peasant Marginalization, and the Sexual Division
    of Labor in Early Twentieth Century China
    Womens Work in Nantong County, Modern China,
    Vol. 19, No. 3 (July, 1993), 354-386.
  • Nantong, a county in northwestern Shanghai.
  • 15th.early 19th.centuries
  • The sexual division of labor in Nantong men
    till, women weave.

Raw cotton
Yarn
Cotton Cloth
spin
weave
Mens work
Womens work
Sexual division of labor within a peasants
household (the Nantong case, 16th. C.-19th. C.)
12
Figures of the men till, the women weave (????)
in China
Wearing blue kerchiefs, women are busy with
weaving,Cotton balls burst and they start to
pick cotton,At market, the cotton cloth they
have woven is very popular,Their products are
well-respected, so are their customs.--Gu Lan
Miao (preliminary translation by Jane Zhang)
Francesca Bray, Technology and Gender Fabrics of
Power in Late Imperial China (Berkeley,
University of California Press, 1997), p. 220.
http//www.ucalgary.ca/library/SpecColl/Chinese/pa
ge31.html
13
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(2)
  • Economic significance Womens cotton production
    geared the overall economic growth in China
    cloth made in the Yangzi Delta district became
    the leader of cloth production in the country.
    These products were sold in northern, southern
    and inland market.
  • Impact on womens status Womens production for
    the market became crucial to family maintenance.
    However, womens new profitability did not
    improve their position in the family. The income
    they generated was controlled not by the women
    themselves, but by the family head (the father,
    the husband or the father-in-law)

14
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(3)
  • After the Opium War (1840s) the introduction of
    inexpensive foreign imported machine-spun yarn
    made peasant households could weave more cloth.
    But the foreign yarn changed the production
    process of cotton cloth.
  • 1. For weaving peasant families adoption of
    machine yarn deepened their market dependency.
    Previously the wove the cotton grew locally, now
    they had to sell raw cotton formerly used for
    spinning to obtain the cash necessary to buy
    yarn. Peasants with insufficient land to provide
    (through the sale of harvested crops) for yarn
    purchase and for the expense of loom could not
    afford to weave. If they really wanted to weave,
    they had to obtain yarn on credit at usurious
    rates.
  • 2. For merchants they could control raw
    materials and marketing. Merchants gained new
    leverage in determining both terms of trade and
    the type of cloth produced. These changes marked
    the beginning of a series of developments through
    which over the next decade Nantongs
    merchant-industrial elite gained growing control
    over the forms and conditions of peasant
    production without undertaking its direct
    supervision.

15
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(4)
Womens work
Men and womens work
These changes resulted from 1) expansion of rural
industry 2) growth of the cotton trade 3) new
modes of obtaining the rural surplus through the
operation of usury-merchant capital. Also because
the merchants could determine the terms and
conditions of trade, they offered cloth producers
with less than subsistence wage-equivalents. The
peasants therefore had to make ends meet by
incomes from both farming and weaving.
16
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(5)
  • Impact on sexual division of labor new pattern
    of sexual division of labor between men and women
    from the early 20th. Century
  • Women farmed and wove, while men moved into
    various forms of permanent, seasonal, or
    part-time wage work. When at home, if possible,
    the busiest farm seasons, men also engaged in
    farming and weaving. The change was a new method
    and strategy to forestall further land division
    so that cloth production and family subsistence
    could be maintained.

17
Sexual Division of Labor in Late Imperial China
(6)
  • Was Nantong womens status improved?
  • Despite the changes in their labor roles, women
    remained under the control of male family members
    and, by extension, the supervision of
    mothers-in-law who owed their position and
    primary allegiance to husbands and son. Even when
    womens work became the mainstay of family
    subsistence, it was in major respects invisible
    since men controlled the marketing of the
    commodities and the income women generated.
  • Related, the worst abuse of the family
    systemfemale infanticide, child marriage,
    contract prostitution, and the buying and selling
    of womennot only continued but in fact may have
    been on the rise.

18
The Women Issues in Developing Countries Today (1)
  • 1. As western countries, those who are expected
    to do the unpaid domestic work in their homes are
    predominantly women
  • 2. From the 1970s, womens participation in the
    labor force has been increasing. Most of the
    growth has been in the informal sector of the
    economy where income, benefits, and job security
    are precarious
  • 3. Womens work is less valued than mens work.
    Womens work is paid less than mens. Those doing
    unpaid domestic work receive lower prestige and
    power.

19
The Women Issues in Developing Countries (2)
  • Informal Sector work under family business or
    family farms self-employed work sub-contracting
    piece-work (paid by productivity but not by
    wageno guaranteed minimum income)
  • Three-quarters of all workers in Africa and Asia
    and almost one-half of workers in Latin American
    are working in informal sector.
  • Globalization mobile capita investment from
    country to country MNCs Deregulation of state
    policies migrant workers
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