
Women Traders in Cross-Cultural Perspective
Mediating Identities, Marketing Wares
- 328 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
This innovative volume studies women as economic, political, and cultural mediators of space, gender, value, and language in informal markets. Drawing on diverse methodologiesāmultisited fieldwork, linguistic analysis, and archival researchāthe contributors demonstrate how women move between and knit together household and marketplace activities. This knitting together pivots on how household practices and economies are translated and transferred to the market, as well as how market practices and economic principles become integral to the nature and construction of the household.
Exploring the cultural identities and economic practices of women traders in ten diverse localesāBolivia, Ghana, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Peru, and the Philippinesāthe authors pay special attention to the effects of global forces, national economic policies, and nongovernmental organizations on women's participation in the market and the domestic sector. The authors also consider the impact that women's economic and political activitiesāin social movements, public protests, and more hidden kinds of subversive behaviorāhave on state policy, on the attitudes of different sectors of society toward female traders, and on the dynamics of the market itself.
A final theme focuses on the cultural dimension of mediation. Many women traders straddle cultural spheres and move back and forth between them. Does this affect their participation in the market and their identities? How do ties of ethnicity or acts of reciprocity affect the nature of commodity exchanges? Do they create exchanges that are neither purely commodified nor wholly without calculation? Or is it more often the case that ethnic commonalities and reciprocity merely mask the commodification of social and economic exchanges? Does this straddling lead to the emergence of new kinds of hybrid identities and practices? In considering these questions, the authors specify the ways in which consumers contribute to identity formation among market women.
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Table of contents
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- About the Authors
- Introduction: Mediating Identities and Marketing Wares
- PART I - Gender Ideologies, Household Models, and Market Dynamics
- PART II - Fields of Power
- PART III - Identity, Economy, and Survival in the Marketplace
- PART IV - Research Agendas
- Notes
- References
- Index