Renegotiating family gender identities in a disadvantaged Atlantic Canadian working-class community: young adults' perspectives |
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Authors: | M Tanya Brann-Barrett |
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Institution: | Communication Department , Cape Breton University , 1250 Grand Lake Road, PO Box 5300, Sydney, NS, B1P 6L2, Canada |
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Abstract: | Within a climate of reduced social welfare support, disadvantaged working-class communities in Canada are in transition as they consider their futures without the industries that were once the staples of their economies. In this paper, I examine how a group of young women and men living in Industrial Cape Breton – a disadvantaged Atlantic Canadian working-class community – negotiate the traditional gendered identities ascribed to them through local history with twenty-first-century conceptions of family and gender. Young adults in this study suggest that class-based and gender-based capital plays a significant role in how these changes are experienced by individuals, families, and communities. Furthermore, the social, economic, and psychological expenses for individuals attempting to secure economic comfort and gendered respectability in their disadvantaged communities leave little time and energy to critically reflect on the systemic social and economic conditions that enable class-based gender inequalities to thrive. As a result, traditional concepts of the masculine family ‘breadwinner’ and the feminine family ‘caregiver’ survive even as the societal basis for these roles is eroded by global capitalism. |
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Keywords: | gender identities social class young adults regional inequalities |
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