Racism, Sexism, and the Constraints on Black Women’s Labor in 1920

E. Branch
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Black women have traditionally occupied a unique position in the American economic structure – at the very bottom. The year 1920 is a unique historical moment to examine how this came to be. Economic prosperity immediately following World War I, the first wave of Black migration, and accelerating industrialization created occupational opportunities that could have enabled Black women to escape working poverty, as the majority of Black men did, but they were actively constrained. Historical narratives have extensively described Black women’s occupational restriction across regions to dirty work, such as domestic service, but not often in conjunction with a comparison to the expanding opportunities of Black men and White women. While intersectionality studies have honed in on the unique place of Black women, little attention has been devoted to this from a historical vantage point. This chapter examines the role that race, gender, and place played in shaping the experience of working poverty and integrates a consideration of queuing theory and Black population size to examine how variations might shape racial outcomes in the labor market in 1920.
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种族主义、性别歧视与1920年黑人妇女劳动的制约
传统上,黑人妇女在美国经济结构中占据着独特的地位——处于最底层。1920年是一个独特的历史时刻,可以审视这一切是如何发生的。第一次世界大战后的经济繁荣、第一波黑人移民潮以及工业化的加速创造了就业机会,这些机会本可以使黑人女性摆脱工作贫困,就像大多数黑人男性一样,但她们受到了积极的限制。历史叙述广泛地描述了黑人女性在不同地区从事脏活累活的情况,比如家政服务,但通常没有将其与黑人男性和白人女性不断扩大的机会进行比较。虽然交叉性研究聚焦于黑人女性的独特地位,但很少有人从历史的角度来关注这一点。本章考察了种族、性别和地域在塑造工作贫困经历中所起的作用,并整合了排队理论和黑人人口规模的考虑,以研究1920年劳动力市场的种族差异如何影响种族结果。
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