The purpose of this study is to examine the role of women in Appalachian coal communities by utilizing both primary and secondary sources. The people of Appalachia have subscribed to patriarchal gender roles since the time of the earliest settlements within the region. Men dealt with the outside world while women\u27s responsibilities centered around the home. Beginning around 1890, industrialization within the area intensified patriarchy as men became wage earners and women remained in the home with little access to formal wage employment. If wages were earned, they usually contributed to familial survival and not female independence. The feminist movement of the 1970s failed to radically alter the patriarchal character of Appalachia, as e...
This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of ...
In 1842 the British Parliament passed the Mines and Collieries Act which excluded women from working...
An article written by Suzanne E. Tallichet and published in the December 1995 issue of Gender & Soci...
This thesis seeks to better analyze the contributions and experiences of women within the central Ap...
The history of coal mining is a history of gender. Colliers and their wives constructed notions of ...
Recent changes in the coal mining industry of Appalachian Kentucky have entailed a widespread econom...
A report submitted by Suzanne E. Tallichet to the Research and Creative Productions Committee in 199...
Storytelling plays an important role in the hollers of Appalachia, however the public narratives we ...
The strict division of social worlds into public and private spheres is widely recognized as a histo...
Women were not recognized as full participants in the United States coal industry until late 1973, w...
particular emphasis on the lives of the women in the community. Ymdings from research sources such a...
For over a century, coal company towns dotted northeastern Pennsylvania’s landscape, sitting upon th...
The objective of this dissertation is to document and explain changes in women\u27s domestic labor i...
Life and work in American coal-mining communities during the latter half of the nineteenth century f...
The permanent decline of coal in Appalachian Kentucky has prompted new state and private economic in...
This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of ...
In 1842 the British Parliament passed the Mines and Collieries Act which excluded women from working...
An article written by Suzanne E. Tallichet and published in the December 1995 issue of Gender & Soci...
This thesis seeks to better analyze the contributions and experiences of women within the central Ap...
The history of coal mining is a history of gender. Colliers and their wives constructed notions of ...
Recent changes in the coal mining industry of Appalachian Kentucky have entailed a widespread econom...
A report submitted by Suzanne E. Tallichet to the Research and Creative Productions Committee in 199...
Storytelling plays an important role in the hollers of Appalachia, however the public narratives we ...
The strict division of social worlds into public and private spheres is widely recognized as a histo...
Women were not recognized as full participants in the United States coal industry until late 1973, w...
particular emphasis on the lives of the women in the community. Ymdings from research sources such a...
For over a century, coal company towns dotted northeastern Pennsylvania’s landscape, sitting upon th...
The objective of this dissertation is to document and explain changes in women\u27s domestic labor i...
Life and work in American coal-mining communities during the latter half of the nineteenth century f...
The permanent decline of coal in Appalachian Kentucky has prompted new state and private economic in...
This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of ...
In 1842 the British Parliament passed the Mines and Collieries Act which excluded women from working...
An article written by Suzanne E. Tallichet and published in the December 1995 issue of Gender & Soci...