A Woman's Job
Against the backdrop of rapid socio-economic change in post-1990 India, scholars and policy makers have expressed surprise at the low rate of women's participation in the workforce, particularly in urban areas. A Woman's Job presents a unique urban ethnography of young lower middle class women's lives in Delhi as they weave in and out of service employment, education, and domestic contracts. Urban, educated, and skilled, these young women seek employment in cafes, malls, call centres, and offices in the globalising landscape of Delhi. Their participation in work enables access to 'things', such as, jeans, smartphones, English language, and the metro, that symbolise global modernity. However, caught in a web of gender, class, and caste inequalities, their identification as 'working' women also generates social anxieties. The book shows how women adopt 'middle-ness' as a strategy of life-making at the multiple sites of work, home, and leisure.
- Captures young women's perspectives on work, that are otherwise underrepresented
- Written in lucid language and offers new vocabulary (middle-ness, middle lives) to understand how women negotiate contradictory expectations amidst socio-economic change
Product details
December 2024Adobe eBook Reader
9781009536677
200 pages
228 × 152 mm
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Note about anonymisation and translation
- Cast of characters
- 1. A Woman's Job
- 2. Madam | English
- 3. Fast-forward | TATA Nano
- 4. Middle class | Smartphones
- 5. Heroine | Jeans
- 6. Working | Job
- 7. Middle Lives.