Gender, coal mining, and Appalachia

  • Porter, Adrianna Kalena
Publication date
May 2002
Publisher
TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange

Abstract

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...

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