Sister Jamaica: A Study of Women, Work and Households in Kingston

by A. Lynn Bolles

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Sister Jamaica is about women factory workers, their households, jobs and lives in Kingston during the destabilization of the Michael Manley administration (1978-79). It shows how these working class women and their household members achieved access to scarce resources and survived a national political and economic crisis. The author argues that such achievements were the result of these women and their households exercising a variety of traditional and contemporary cultural, social and economic options. Bolles looks at the influences of race, class and gender, emphasizing women's roles in kinship, kindredship and domestic organization. Domestic chores, cash flows and networks of exchange are examined in order to illustrate which household member performed what kind of task and under what kind of circumstances. The division of labor among 127 households is examined. Finally, Bolles looks at the factories and female work forces against the background of international capitalism. This text will provide beneficial reading for introductory anthropology classes and courses in women's studies, Afro-American studies, and Caribbean and Latin American studies.
  • ISBN10 0761802118
  • ISBN13 9780761802112
  • Publish Date 19 March 1996
  • Publish Status Out of Stock
  • Out of Print 13 November 2013
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University Press of America
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 150
  • Language English