
This lecture compares the racially heterogeneous, privately-owned
American telephone industry, and the relatively homogeneous,
publicly-owned British system, to examine how race and gender
constructions implicit in the national identities of the two countries
influence employment opportunities. For all the differences in the
histories of the two telephone industries and variations in the
construction of racial, national, and gender identities, blacks in the
United States and Britain had remarkably similar experiences in
obtaining employment as telephone operators. This leads to the
conclusion that the power of national identity in the workplace is
strongly based on "whiteness". Despite their limited access to national
identity, white women experienced advantages that were denied to black
women, which illustrates how race modified the impact of gender on the
privileges of national identity.
- Enseignant: MOURAD ATY