ABSTRACT

First published in 1999, this volume responds to the 1968 sewing worker strikes at the Ford Motor Company, asking how the worker demands made by women are to be heard and understood in workplace negotiations. At the time of original writing in the late 1990s, there remained many women workers whose needs and concerns remained hidden behind a workplace agenda dominated by male interests. Kay M. Fraser utilises some of the insights offered by post-structuralist feminist theorists to interrogate the competing debates about women workers as they were discursively constructed by the organisations, institutions and individuals interested and involved in the employment of women during the 1960s. Fraser further explores notions of sameness and difference, how these were used to formulate a view of women workers and highlights the need for women to be seen, particularly by those involved in the workplace negotiations of the future, as both the same as and different from men workers.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|100 pages

'Private' difference, discrimination and sameness

chapter 1|27 pages

The private/public divide under challenge

chapter 2|24 pages

Family carers as 'workers'

chapter 3|24 pages

Women and industrial training

chapter 4|23 pages

Part-time work for industrial 'outsiders'

part II|117 pages

'Public' difference, equality and sameness

chapter 5|24 pages

The construction of an equal pay policy

chapter 6|23 pages

The dilemma for women trade union leaders

chapter 7|22 pages

Masculinity and the gendering of equality

chapter 8|28 pages

'Women' in disarray

chapter 9|18 pages

The 1990s - and the legacy from the 1960s