The material of male power

C Cockburn - Feminist Review, 1981 - journals.sagepub.com
C Cockburn
Feminist Review, 1981journals.sagepub.com
A skilled craftsman may be np more than a worker in relation to capital, but seen from within
the working class he has been a king among men and lord of his household. As a high
earner he preferred to see himself as the sole breadwinner, supporter of wife and children.
As artisan he defined the unskilled workman as someone of inferior status, and
would'scarcely count him a brother and certainly not an equal'(Berg, 1979: 121). For any
socialist movement concerned with unity in the working class, the skilled craftsman is …
A skilled craftsman may be np more than a worker in relation to capital, but seen from within the working class he has been a king among men and lord of his household. As a high earner he preferred to see himself as the sole breadwinner, supporter of wife and children. As artisan he defined the unskilled workman as someone of inferior status, and would'scarcely count him a brother and certainly not an equal'(Berg, 1979: 121). For any socialist movement concerned with unity in the working class, the skilled craftsman is therefore a problem. For anyone concerned with the relationship of class and gender, and with the foundations of male power, skilled men provide a fertile field for study.
Compositors in the printing trade are an artisan group that have long defeated the attempts of capital to weaken the tight grip on the labour process from which their strength derives. Now their occupation is undergoing a dramatic technological change initiated by employers. Introduction of the new computerized technology of photocomposition represents an attack on what remains of their control over their occupation and wipes out many of the aspects of the work which have served as criteria by which'hot metal'composition for printing has been defined as a manual skill and a man's craft. 1
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