1999
Geraldine Pratt
This paper is an exploration of what poststructuralist theories of the subject
and discourse analysis can bring to theories of labor market segmentation,
namely an understanding of how individuals come to understand and are limited in
their occupational options. I examine three discursive constructions of "Filipina"
and argue that they work to structure Filipinas' labor market experiences in
Vancouver. Filipinas who come to Canada through the Live-in Caregiver Program
often come with university educations and professional experiences (e.g., as registered
nurses) but then become members of the most occupationally segregated of
ethnic groups in Vancouver. As domestic workers in Vancouver, they are defined as
"supplicant, preimmigrants," as inferior "housekeepers," and, within the Filipino
community, as "husband stealers." I demonstrate that geography has much to bring
to discourse analysis; there are geographies written into discourses of "Filipina"
that work to position Filipinas in Vancouver as inferior. While the examined discourses
overlap and reinforce the marginalization of Filipinas, I also explore how
discursive analysis can function as ideology critique, by examining the internal
inconsistencies and silences within particular discourses and the points of resistance
that emerge when different discourses come into contact and tension.
Economic Geography
75
3
215-236
Clark University
Occupations in services - Domestic work
Policy analysis and Dokumentado kaso ng pang-aabuso
Mambabatas, Mananaliksik, Mga unyon, and NGO / komunidad group / network ng pagkakaisa
Karapatang magpalit ng employer, Labour Standards, Pagsasama-sama ng mga programa para sa mga bagong dating, Access sa permanenteng katayuan, Pamantayan para sa pagpili ng mga manggagawa (im) migrante, and Karapatan sa pagkakapantay-pantay (kasarian)
British Columbia
Ekonomya, Heograpya, Human Resource Management, and Sikolohiya
Ingles