ABSTRACT

Why did working-class women become the central labour force on assembly lines in the new consumer goods’ industries of the inter-war period? What was the long-term significance of this for the pattern of women’s work, both in paid employment and in the home?

Originally published in 1990, Women Assemble fills a major gap in the history of women and work, and develops a theory of women’s class relations, and of course gender and class more generally, by means of an original case-study. Taken from a wide variety of sources, it uses a multidisciplinary approach and is brought to life by interviews with people who worked in assembly-line industries during the inter-war period.

This extremely readable study is important to feminists, historians, and sociologists, as well as to all those concerned with issues of gender, class, and the labour process.

chapter Chapter one|28 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter two|38 pages

The changing pattern of women's employment

chapter Chapter three|26 pages

The restructuring of industrial capitalism

chapter Chapter four|50 pages

Five factories

chapter Chapter five|54 pages

Women assembling

Work, wages and assembly-line production

chapter Chapter six|29 pages

Women assembled

Gender and the division of labour

chapter Chapter seven|31 pages

Homeward bound

Changes in domestic production and consumption

chapter Chapter eight|26 pages

Women and the total social organization of labour