Holding Up More Than Half the Sky

by ;
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2001-07-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Illinois Pr
List Price: $47.20

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Summary

In 1982, twenty thousand Chinese-American garment workers-mostly women--went on strike in New York's Chinatown and forced every Chinese garment industry employer in the city to sign a union contract. In this pioneering study, Xiaolan Bao penetrates to the heart of Chinese-American society to explain how this militancy and organized protest, seemingly so at odds with traditional Chinese female behavior, came about.Bao conducted more than a hundred interviews, primarily with Chinese immigrant women who were working or had worked in the Chinatown garment shops and garment-related institutions in the city. Blending these poignant, often dramatic personal stories with a detailed history of the garment industry, Chinese immigrant labor, and the Chinese community in New York, Bao shows how the high rate of married women participating in wage-earning labor outside the home profoundly transformed family culture and with it the image and empowerment of Chinese-American women.Bao offers a complex and subtle discussion of the interplay of ethnic and class factors within the garment industry in New York City. She examines the exploitative paternalism, rooted in ethnic social and economic structures, by which operators sustained low wages and marginal working conditions. She also documents the uneasy relationship between the ILGWU and rank-and-file women garment workers whose claim to direct representation was essentially ignored by union leadership. Through the words of the women workers themselves, Bao shows how their changing positions within their families and within the workplace galvanized them to unite and stand up for themselves. Passionately told and prodigiously documented, 3Holding Up More Than Half the Sky is an important contribution to Asian-American history, labor history, and the history of women.

Table of Contents

Foreword ix
Roger Daniels
Acknowledgments xi
A Note on Interviews and Transliterations xv
Introduction 1(14)
PART 1: THE MILIEU
The Vicissitudes of New York City's Garment Industry: A Brief History
15(12)
The Garment Workers: Gender, Race, and Class in the City's Garment Industry
27(16)
The Growth of the Chinatown Garment Industry
43(30)
PART 2: CHINESE WOMEN WORKERS BEFORE: 1982
New York's Chinese Working-Class Families during the Exclusion Era
73(16)
The Transformation of New York's Chinese Working-Class Families after World War II
89(21)
Women in the Chinatown Garment Industry
110(33)
Chinese Women Workers and the ILGWU
143(30)
PART 3: THE 1982 STRIKE AND ITS IMPACT
Winds of Change: Preconditions of the Strike
173(24)
The 1982 Strike
197(16)
Continuing the Struggle, 1982-92
213(32)
Conclusion 245(8)
Epilogue 253(2)
Glossary 255(6)
Notes 261(44)
Bibliography 305(20)
Index 325

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