SOSC 3210 Chapter Notes - Chapter --: Informal Sector, Sex Segregation

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Joan sangster, telling our stories: feminist debates and the use of oral history, . Women"s history review, v. 3, issue 1 (1994): 86-100. Oral history not only redirects our gaze to overlooked topics, but it also a methodology directly informed by interdisciplinary feminist debates about our research objective, questions and use of interview material. What are the ethical issues involved in interpreting other women lives through oral history a dew hat theoretical approaches are more effective in conceptualize this methodology. Wage earning women in large factories in peterbrough canada from 1920 to end of ww2. How gender, race and class are structural and ideological relations and shaped the construction of historical memory. Women were less likely than men to place themselves at the centre of public events, downplayed own activities, emphasizing role of other family members in their recollections. Many women reconstructed past using bench marks of their family life cycle.

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