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“They don't even look like women workers†: Femininity and Class in Twentieth-Century Latin America

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  • Weinstein, Barbara

Abstract

Recent research on consumer culture and working-class femininity in the United States has argued that attention to fashionable clothing and dime novels did not undermine female working-class identities, but rather provided key resources for creating those identities. In this essay I consider whether we can see a similar process of appropriation by working-class women in Latin America. There women employed in factories had to contend with widespread denigration of the female factory worker. Looking first at the employer-run “Centers for Domestic Instruction†in São Paulo, I argue that “proper femininity†in these centers—frequented by large numbers of working-class women—reflected middle-class notions of the skilled housewife, and situated working-class women as nearly middle class. What we see is a process of “approximation,†not appropriation. I then look at the case of Argentina (especially Greater Buenos Aires) where Peronism also promoted “traditional†roles for working-class women but where Eva Perón emerges as a working-class heroine. The figure of Evita—widely reviled by women of the middle and upper classes—becomes a means to construct an alternative, class-based femininity for working-class women.

Suggested Citation

  • Weinstein, Barbara, 2006. "“They don't even look like women workers†: Femininity and Class in Twentieth-Century Latin America," International Labor and Working-Class History, Cambridge University Press, vol. 69(1), pages 161-176, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:ilawch:v:69:y:2006:i:01:p:161-176_00
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