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Contribution to Book
A Coalfield Tapestry: Weaving the Socioeconomic Fabric of Women's Lives
Neither Separate Nor Equal Women, Race, and Class in the South (1999)
  • Ann M. Oberhauser, West Virginia University
  • Anne-Marie Turnage
Abstract
Throughout the coalfields of central Appalachia, working-class people are engaging in alternative means of economic survival. For many, the region's endemic poverty is now worsening as tremendous job losses in coal mining diminish the historic source of employment for working -class men. In order to secure the necessities of life for themselves and their families, working-class women are not only entering the paid labor force but also turning to unregulated forms of income generation that lie outside the formal, wage-earning economy.
Publication Date
April, 1999
Editor
Barbara E. Smith
Publisher
Temple University Press
ISBN
1566396808
Publisher Statement
1999 Temple University Press. Posted with permission.
Citation Information
Ann M. Oberhauser and Anne-Marie Turnage. "A Coalfield Tapestry: Weaving the Socioeconomic Fabric of Women's Lives" PhiladelphiaNeither Separate Nor Equal Women, Race, and Class in the South Vol. 6 (1999) p. 109 - 122
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ann-oberhauser/16/