Ciência_Iscte
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Publication Detailed Description
Journal Title
Journal Modern Craft
Year (definitive publication)
2025
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
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Abstract
References to the existence of women in Portuguese Colonial Public Works can be found on payrolls since the turn of the nineteenth century. Their work was subordinated to men’s work and they consistently earned lower wages. After World War II, their presence in quarries, or dealing with small pavement repairs, would endure in economically precarious geographies. One of these locations was Cape Verde, where positions for carpenters, bricklayers, and construction helpers were left vacant after the emigration of men. This situation was not very different from that in rural Portugal, where women, mostly illiterate, also constituted a cheap workforce. Examining gendered labor in colonial Cape Verde, this article analyzes the complex coexistence of subalternity, race, and extreme poverty in an understudied context. Women workers were generally associated with unskilled labor and high demands on a large scale. In light of their apparent invisibility in colonial records, this paper considers whether and how the characteristics of this group impacted design projects. It also explores whether working in Public Works meant the emancipation of women who were heads of single-parent families or only represented the perpetuation of inequality.
Acknowledgements
The author thanks Beatriz Serrazina for the careful review and Sónia Henrique for the support in data collection. This work was funded by the European Union (ERC, ArchLabour, 1101096606).
Keywords
Colonial public works,Labor,Women,Cape Verde,Construction,Building site
Fields of Science and Technology Classification
- Arts (arts, history of arts, performing arts, music) - Humanities
Funding Records
| Funding Reference | Funding Entity |
|---|---|
| ERC, ArchLabour, 1101096606 | Comissão Europeia |
| PTDC/ART-DAQ/0592/2020 | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia |
| 2022.01720.PTDC | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia |
Related Projects
This publication is an output of the following project(s):
- Dominance and mass-violence through Housing and Architecture during colonial wars. The Portuguese case (Guinea-Bissau, Angola, Mozambique): colonial documentation and post-independence critical assessment
- Women architects in former Portuguese colonial Africa: gender and struggle for professional recognition (1953-1985)
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