Migrant Women’s Voices: Talking About Life and Work in the UK Since 1945

Migrant Women’s Voices: Talking About Life and Work in the UK Since 1945

Author
Linda McDowell
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Language
English
Year
2016
ISBN
9781474224475,9781474224482,9781474224468,9781474224512
File Type
pdf
File Size
2.0 MiB

About the Author

Linda McDowell is Professor of Human Geography and Professorial Fellow of St John's College, University of Oxford, UK, and Honorary Fellow of the Gender Institute at the London School of Economics, UK. She is the author of Working Bodies: Interactive Service Employment and Workplace Identities (2009) and Working Lives: Gender, Migration and Employment in Britain, 1945-2007 (2013). She is a Fellow of the British Academy.

Product Description

Between 1945 and the new century millions of women, including mothers and migrants, joined the labour force. These changes are brought to life through the stories of migrant women, working in factories and hospitals, banks, care homes, shops and universities over a period of 60 years.

Migrant Women's Voices is an autobiography of the post-war period as Britain became a multi-cultural society and waged work the norm for most women. McDowell illustrates the shift in migration patterns as post-imperial migrants to the UK replaced the immediate post-war pattern of migrants from war-torn Europe and who were then themselves joined by migrants from an increasingly diverse range of countries as the 20th century drew to a close.

Review

"This new book by McDowell (human geography, St. John's College, Oxford) is an extension and expansion of her Working Lives: Gender, Migration and Employment in Britain, 1945-2007 (CH, Feb'14, 51-3451a). An opening chapter sets the context for the oral narratives that follow by emphasizing the importance of Britain's employment transformation from manufacturing to service industries, the limitation for most migrant women to low-paying employment, and the distribution of migrants from the Baltics and Poland post-1945 and then heavily from the new Commonwealth of Africa, the Caribbean, Pakistan, and India from the 1950s onward. The meat of the book lies in chapters 2–8, detailing extensive oral narratives by immigrant women in all kinds of employment (yes, the National Health Service too), including unwaged home work. Discrimination and living as the "other" is the major common thread connecting these 70-plus individuals' recollections of their lives in Britain. Numerous revealing details of personal experience further humanize this data. Jean McCrindle and Sheila Rowbotham in 1977 did a somewhat similar examination of British-born women in Dutiful Daughters: Women Talk about Their Lives. This book has ties to numerous works in sociology and history. A must for strong British collections. Summing Up: Essential. All levels/libraries." -CHOICE

“Overall, the vivid and deeply personal accounts of migrant women’s experiences, perceptions, and agency as workers in British society make this book both a valuable contribution to migration research and an enjoyable reading. It will undoubtedly appeal to researchers and students and to the general public it targets.” -International Migration Review

"[B]eyond being an informative, must-read work for scholars specializing in related topics, it is also accessible, engaging book for students at various levels, as well as for the broader public … I was eager to read this book, and I was not disappointed. It is eye-opening, highly recommended reading for scholars, practitioners, and the public alike." ―Journal of British Studies

“McDowell enables women from generations of immigration to tell their sadly unchanging stories of disgraceful exploitation and discrimination. From wartime refugees from Eastern Europe and hopeful women from the Caribbean, brought by the government to rescue the economy and build health and welfare services after 1945, to 21st century migrants from many cultures and countries, they have made indispensable contributions to sustaining the NHS and other essential services, even banking. Whatever their colour or skills, they have faced hostility and consignment to lower-paid, lower-status work than they merit.” ―Patricia M. Thane, King's College London, UK

“What do immigrant women say about

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