Race on the Line is the first book to address the convergence of race, gender, and technology in the telephone industry. Venus Green—a former Bell System employee and current labor historian—presents a hundred year history of telephone operators and their work processes, from the invention of the telephone in 1876 to the period immediately before the break-up of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in 1984. Green shows how, as technology changed from a manual process to a computerized one, sexual and racial stereotypes enabled management to manipulate both the workers and the workplace. More than a simple story of the impact of technology, Race on the Line combines oral history, personal experience, and archival research to weave a complicated history of how skill is constructed and how its meanings change within a rapidly expanding industry. Green discusses how women faced an environment where male union leaders displayed economic as well as gender biases and where racism served as a persistent system of division. Separated into chronological sections, the study moves from the early years when the Bell company gave both male and female workers opportunities to advance; to the era of the “white lady” image of the company, when African American women were excluded from the industry and feminist working-class consciousness among white women was consequently inhibited; to the computer era, a time when black women had waged a successful struggle to integrate the telephone operating system but faced technological displacement and unrewarding work. An important study of working-class American women during the twentieth century, this book will appeal to a wide audience, particularly students and scholars with interest in women’s history, labor history, African American history, the history of technology, and business history.
Twenty-five essays covering a range of areas from religion and immigration to family structure and crime examine America's changing racial and ethnic scene.
On August 7, 1706, on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, an Accomack County court recorded “a Malatta or Mustee bigg with a bastard Child.” The woman, named Priss (Priscilla), was free and had become pregnant several months earlier in ...
On Foster and the beginnings of African American film companies , see Mark A. Reid , Redefining Black Film ( Berkeley : University of California Press , 1993 ) , 7-18 ; Cripps , Slow Fade to Black , 70-89 ; and Henry T. Sampson , Blacks ...
Chrissie Wellington, the world's number one female Ironman athlete and four-time World Ironman Champion, presents her struggles, wisdom, and experiences gained from her hard-won career as a triathlete.
In Region , Race , and Reconstruction : Essays in Honor of C. Vann Woodward , ed . J. Morgan Kousser and James M. McPherson , 143-77 . New York : Oxford University Press , 1982 . Foucault , Michel . Discipline and Punish : The Birth of ...
Based on interviews and site visits with twelve Baldrige National Quality Award-winning companies as well as with two winners of the President's Quality and Productivity Award. A complete guide for...
Following The Conjure Woman's publication, Booker T. Washington urged Chesnutt to seize the golden opportunity to create sympathy throughout the country for our cause through the medium of fiction. Joel Chandler Harris [white author of ...
Racial. Violence. in. William. Faulkner's. Sanctuary. Written later in the 1920s and from the other side of the color ... forms.1 Faulkner reportedly claimed to have “worn out three records of [George] Gershwin's 'Rhapsody in Blue'” in ...
In the early 1990s a story alleged that Al Copeland, the founder and CEO of Popeyes Famous Fried Chicken, had made a substantial campaign contribution to the senate campaign of David Duke, former KKK grand dragon, in Louisiana.
One of the nation's most accomplished historians unravels the stories of three extraordinary families from different eras in American history to represent the complexity of race in America, and to force readers to rethink assumptions about ...