Professions and patriarchy
Material type: TextSeries: International library of sociologyPublication details: 1992 Routledge LondonDescription: ix, 233 pISBN:- 9780415070447
- 305.5530941 W4P7
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | Ahmedabad | 305.5530941 W4P7 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 171147 |
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305.553 F7P7 Professionalism reborn: theory prophecy and policy | 305.553 L3P7 Professional work: a sociology approach | 305.553 M2S6 The sociology of the professions | 305.5530941 W4P7 Professions and patriarchy | 305.5530954 R2A7 Appropriately Indian: gender and culture in a new transnational class | 305.5542 N6S6 Socio-economic transformation of scheduled castes in Uttar Pradesh: a geographical analysis | 305.56 M4 The minority conundrum: living in majoritarian times |
This book engages with sociological debates about the social sources of professional power and with feminist debates about how gender segregation in employment is generated and sustained. The author argues that the gender blindness of prevailing neo-Marxist and neo-Weberian approaches to the study of professions has frustrated the development of an analysis of the relation between gender and professional projects. It is necessary to gender the agents of professional projects and to historically anchor occupational professionalism within the structural parameters of nineteenth century patriarchal capitalism. The author elaborates a model of occupational closure which concentrates in particular on the gendered dimensions of closure. It distinguishes between exclusionary, demaractionary, inclusionary and dual closure strategies of occupational closure. The explanatory power of the model is tested through an analysis of the professional projects and inter-professional rivalries of medical men, midwives, nurses and radiographers in the emerging medical division of labour in the latter half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Impressive, shrewd and cogent, the book binds together sociology and feminist concepts in highly original and challenging ways. It will be of interest to students of women's studies, the sociology of work and the sociology of health and medicine. (http://www.wheelers.co.nz)
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