Where are the Men? Here are the Men and the Women! Surveillance, Gender, and Strikes in Egyptian Textile Factories

Type Journal Article - Journal of Middle East Women's Studies
Title Where are the Men? Here are the Men and the Women! Surveillance, Gender, and Strikes in Egyptian Textile Factories
Author(s)
Volume 9
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 28-53
URL http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&profile=ehost&scope=site&authtype=crawler&jrnl=15​525864&AN=89798297&h=X/8DNS0y+VlIc2GMJ0aU6ZgzbuWqCbqYFr6cbS+Nn9SCcRpILmopy81OHlxHG5oUFh03z8fu17/097G​48UIwRg==&crl=c
Abstract
For the past decade Egypt has been experiencing the largest wave of labor action
since the 1950s with over two million Egyptians protesting in the workplace
between 2004 and 2011. The centrality of gender in labor protests seemed
obvious when in December 2006 the female workers of the Egypt Spinning and
Weaving Company, the largest Egyptian textile firm, mobilized and chanted the
slogan, “Where are the men? Here are the women!” to shame their colleagues
into joining the strike. By exploring the connection between the political economy
context, the reorganization of work, the rise of the security state, and the
redefinition of masculinity, this article analyzes the shifting gender dynamics that
influence labor protests in Egypt. Based on an ethnographic study conducted in
two textile factories of the Nile Delta region between 2008 and 2010, I argue that
protest is a phase of transgression of gender relations for both men and women,
2
and broadly reflects the impact of economic change on the domestic and work
spheres. The factory materializes changing gender roles and narratives through
policing and surveillance of workers’ behaviors, gendered logics of social
control, and the visibility of female militancy in labor protests. As a result of these
transformations, women’s roles in labor protests have become part of the process
of men reclaiming their masculinity, which has been humiliated by wage erosion,
the transformation of labor relations, and the coercive nature of relationships
between the state and its citizens.

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