Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930

This thesis explores the discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry c. 1870-1930. It examines how working women became knowable and visible, and some of the ways in which women negotiated the relationships of power within which they became placed. Dundee was dubbed 'a woman'...

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Main Author: Wainwright, Emma M.
Other Authors: Clayton, Dan
Published: University of St Andrews 2002
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.730649
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7306492018-04-04T03:28:02ZGender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930Wainwright, Emma M.Clayton, Dan2002This thesis explores the discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry c. 1870-1930. It examines how working women became knowable and visible, and some of the ways in which women negotiated the relationships of power within which they became placed. Dundee was dubbed 'a woman's town' because of the central role that women played in the city's jute industry. Although a recent range of historical scholarship has started to ask new questions about women's identities and experiences of work, this study stresses the importance of engaging more widely with questions of geography, gender, discourse and power-knowledge. I explore how working women were observed, represented and categorised through a variety of material spaces - mills and factories, streets and homes, and through a range of conceptual spaces - economic, philanthropic and medical. The thesis focuses on the very processes and gendered discourses through which working women were made known - the practices of domination and resistance, and surveillance and control, and the different forms of knowledge production, including journalism, accountancy and philanthropy. Particular attention is paid to the ways in which divisions between work and home, and boundaries between public and private, were affirmed, reaffirmed and contested by working women and other urban actors. It is suggested that the work of Michel Foucault and a wider range of geographical and feminist theory provide us with a particularly rich and pliable set of conceptual resources with which to probe working women's geographies and the processes of power-knowledge, in the Dundee context. I suggest that the web of discourse that produced Dundee's working women as objects of concern was aimed not at preventing women from working, but at scrutinising and managing every aspect of their lives.University of St Andrewshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.730649http://hdl.handle.net/10023/12450Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description This thesis explores the discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry c. 1870-1930. It examines how working women became knowable and visible, and some of the ways in which women negotiated the relationships of power within which they became placed. Dundee was dubbed 'a woman's town' because of the central role that women played in the city's jute industry. Although a recent range of historical scholarship has started to ask new questions about women's identities and experiences of work, this study stresses the importance of engaging more widely with questions of geography, gender, discourse and power-knowledge. I explore how working women were observed, represented and categorised through a variety of material spaces - mills and factories, streets and homes, and through a range of conceptual spaces - economic, philanthropic and medical. The thesis focuses on the very processes and gendered discourses through which working women were made known - the practices of domination and resistance, and surveillance and control, and the different forms of knowledge production, including journalism, accountancy and philanthropy. Particular attention is paid to the ways in which divisions between work and home, and boundaries between public and private, were affirmed, reaffirmed and contested by working women and other urban actors. It is suggested that the work of Michel Foucault and a wider range of geographical and feminist theory provide us with a particularly rich and pliable set of conceptual resources with which to probe working women's geographies and the processes of power-knowledge, in the Dundee context. I suggest that the web of discourse that produced Dundee's working women as objects of concern was aimed not at preventing women from working, but at scrutinising and managing every aspect of their lives.
author2 Clayton, Dan
author_facet Clayton, Dan
Wainwright, Emma M.
author Wainwright, Emma M.
spellingShingle Wainwright, Emma M.
Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
author_sort Wainwright, Emma M.
title Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
title_short Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
title_full Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
title_fullStr Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
title_full_unstemmed Gender, space and power : discourses on working women in Dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
title_sort gender, space and power : discourses on working women in dundee's jute industry, c. 1870-1930
publisher University of St Andrews
publishDate 2002
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.730649
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