1st Edition

Women Workers And Technological Change In Europe In The Nineteenth And twentieth century

Edited By Gertjan De Groot, Marlou Schrover Copyright 1995
    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    From the traditional stereotyped viewpoint, femininity and technology clash. This negative association between women and technology is one of the features of the sex-typing of jobs. Men are seen as technically competent and creative; women are seen as incompetent, suited only to work with machines that have been made and maintained by men. Men identify themselves with technology, and technology is identified with masculinity. The relationship between technology, technological change and women's work is, however, very complex.; Through studies examining technological change and the sexual division of labour, this book traces the origins of the segregation between women's work and men's work and sheds light on the complicated relationship between work and technology. Drawing on research from a number of European countries England, Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands, international contributors present detailed studies on women's work spanning two centuries. The chapters deal with a variety of work environments - office work, textiles and pottery, food production, civil service and cotton and wool industries.; This work rejects the idea that women were mainly employed as unskilled labour in the industrial revolutions, asserting that skill was required from the women, but that both the historical record about women's work and the social construction of the concept of "skill" have denied this.

    Chapter 1 General Introduction, Gertjan de Groot, Marlou Schrover; Chapter 2 Frames of Reference: Skill, Gender and New Technology in the Hosiery Industry, Harriet Bradley; Chapter 3 The Creation of a Gendered Division of Labour in the Danish Textile Industry, Marianne Rostgård; Chapter 4 Foreign Technology and the Gender Division of Labour in a Dutch Cotton Spinning Mill, Gertjan de Groot; Chapter 5 ‘The Mysteries of the Typewriter’: Technology and Gender in the British Civil Service, 1870–1914, Meta Zimmeck; Chapter 6 ‘A Revolution in the Workplace’? Women’s Work in Munitions Factories and Technological Change 1914–1918, Deborah Thom; Chapter 7 Gender and Technological Change in the North Staffordshire Pottery Industry, Jacqueline Sarsby; Chapter 8 Periodization and the Engendering of Technology: The Pottery of Gustavsberg, Sweden, 1880–1980, Ulla Wikander; Chapter 9 Creating Gender: Technology and Femininity in the Swedish Dairy Industry, Lena Sommestad; Chapter 10 Cooking up Women’s Work: Women Workers in the Dutch Food Industries 1889–1960, Marlou Schrover;

    Biography

    Gertjan de Groot, Marlou Schrover