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In this richly detailed, sensitive ethnographic work, Sally Cole
takes as her starting point the firsthand accounts of five
differently situated Portuguese women, who describe their lives in
a rural fishing community on the north coast of Portugal.
Skillfully combining these life stories with cultural and economic
analysis, Cole radically departs from the picture of women as
sexual beings that prevails in the anthropological literature on
Europe and the Mediterranean. Her very different strategy--a focus
on women as workers--reflects the Portuguese women's own definition
of themselves and allows them the strong, resonant voice that is
the goal of both the new ethnography and feminist scholarship. From
this new perspective, Cole proposes an important critique of the
dominant paradigm of southern European gender relations as being
embedded in the code of honor and shame. Covering the Salazar
years, as well as the period since the 1974 Revolution, Cole shows
that fisherwomen of the past enjoyed greater autonomy in work and
social relations than do their daughters and granddaughters, who
live in a context of increasing commoditization and
industrialization. Central to this account is an examination of the
changing structure and role of the household as economic production
moved to the factory.
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