妇女助产史

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q3 WOMENS STUDIES Journal of Middle East Womens Studies Pub Date : 2021-11-01 DOI:10.1215/15525864-9306818
Stacy D. Fahrenthold
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在讲阿拉伯语的mahjar(散居国外),贫困劳动者的困境是妇女慈善事业的焦点。关于两次世界大战期间叙利亚、黎巴嫩和巴勒斯坦侨民福利救济的奖学金目前将其置于一种性别化的慈善政治中。本文重新审视了这一框架,并主张以阶级为中心重新评估“女性援助”政治,探索女性救济与无产阶级互助战略的交叉点。波士顿的叙利亚妇女援助协会(SLAS)成立于1917年,为叙利亚工人提供食物、住所、教育和就业。SLAS志愿者将他们的努力理解为减轻全球资本主义劳工制度给叙利亚工人带来的不稳定。他们既是一个妇女组织,也是一个由叙利亚妇女领导的无产阶级运动。这篇文章借鉴了SLAS的记录和叙利亚裔美国媒体,将叙利亚裔美国女性置于工人阶级形成的过程中,并得出结论,两次世界大战期间马哈贾的劳动史需要关注工厂之外的社会再生产空间。
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Ladies Aid as Labor History
In the Arabic-speaking mahjar (diaspora), the plight of the working poor was the focus of women’s philanthropy. Scholarship on welfare relief in the interwar Syrian, Lebanese, and Palestinian diaspora currently situates it within a gendered politics of benevolence. This article reconsiders that frame and argues for a class-centered reassessment of “ladies aid” politics exploring the intersections of women’s relief with proletarian mutual aid strategies. Founded in 1917, the Syrian Ladies Aid Society (SLAS) of Boston provided food, shelter, education, and employment to Syrian workers. SLAS volunteers understood their efforts as mitigating the precarities imposed on Syrian workers by the global capitalist labor system. Theirs was both a women’s organization and a proletarian movement led by Syrian women. Drawing from SLAS records and the Syrian American press, the article centers Syrian American women within processes of working-class formation and concludes that labor history of the interwar mahjar requires focus on spaces of social reproduction beyond the factory floor.
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37
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