Putting a Human Face on It: Gender and Photographic Meaning in a Canadian Women's Coal Mine Campaign

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY International Labor and Working-Class History Pub Date : 2023-08-09 DOI:10.1017/S0147547923000091
J. Spence, C. Stephenson
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Abstract

Abstract In January 1999, the Canadian government announced their withdrawal from the Cape Breton mining industry with a settlement package for redundant miners, which was considered inadequate by miners and their families. In response, a group of women organized a community-based campaign, United Families (UF), led by two women who traveled to Ottawa to meet national politicians presenting themselves explicitly as “miners’ wives.” While the UF located their campaign within the context of family and community, as expected of miners’ wives, their principal focus was the men disadvantaged by the settlement. Here they strayed onto the terrain of the men's union. To support their case the women took photographs of miners leaving the pit at the end of a shift and organized them into an album. This became a catalyst for the disjuncture between the gendered expectations associated with female roles, and the women's efforts to represent the interests of the men. Intended as objective evidence in support of their position, the photographs carried a range of complex emotions relating to the women's campaign: They expressed the subjective meanings of the women's relationship with mining and the men photographed, as well as providing material evidence of the condition of the miners. This subjectivity was overlaid onto gendered subtexts inscribed within the history of photography in the public and domestic spheres. In campaign negotiations the women struggled to control the meaning of the photographic images and their endeavors resulted in only very minor amendments to the original settlement. The UF women's creative use of photography ultimately undermined the legitimacy of the women's negotiations. However, the photographs remain a testament to the history of mining in Cape Breton and to the emotional commitment of women to a partnership with men forged through the sexual division of labor in coal mining. This article draws upon a range of evidence and theories of gender, activism, and photographic practice to analyze the ways in which the women were disadvantaged in their campaign.
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把人的脸放在上面:加拿大妇女煤矿运动中的性别和摄影意义
1999年1月,加拿大政府宣布退出布雷顿角采矿业,并为矿工及其家属提供了一个解决方案,这被矿工及其家属认为是不够的。作为回应,一群妇女组织了一个以社区为基础的运动——“联合家庭”(United Families),由两名妇女领导,她们前往渥太华会见国家政治家,明确地以“矿工妻子”的身份出现。虽然联合会将他们的运动定位在家庭和社区的背景下,正如矿工的妻子所期望的那样,他们的主要焦点是在定居点中处于不利地位的男人。在这里,他们误入了男子联合会的地盘。为了支持她们的说法,她们拍下了矿工们下班后离开矿井的照片,并把它们整理成一本相册。这成为与女性角色相关的性别期望与女性代表男性利益的努力之间脱节的催化剂。作为支持她们立场的客观证据,这些照片承载了一系列与妇女运动有关的复杂情感:它们表达了妇女与采矿和被拍照男子之间关系的主观意义,以及提供了矿工状况的物证。这种主体性被覆盖在公共和家庭领域的摄影历史中所包含的性别潜台词上。在竞选谈判中,妇女们努力控制照片图像的含义,她们的努力只导致对原始和解协议进行了非常微小的修改。佛罗里达大学女性对摄影的创造性使用最终破坏了女性谈判的合法性。然而,这些照片仍然是布雷顿角采矿业历史的见证,也是女性在煤炭开采中通过性别分工与男性建立伙伴关系的情感承诺的见证。本文借鉴了一系列关于性别、行动主义和摄影实践的证据和理论,分析了女性在竞选中处于不利地位的方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: ILWCH has an international reputation for scholarly innovation and quality. It explores diverse topics from globalisation and workers’ rights to class and consumption, labour movements, class identities and cultures, unions, and working-class politics. ILWCH publishes original research, review essays, conference reports from around the world, and an acclaimed scholarly controversy section. Comparative and cross-disciplinary, the journal is of interest to scholars in history, sociology, political science, labor studies, global studies, and a wide range of other fields and disciplines. Published for International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc.
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