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Sex and the office: a history of gender, power, and desire

Part of the Society and the sexes in the modern world series
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In this engaging bookthe first to historicize our understanding of sexual harassment in the workplaceJulie Berebitsky explores how Americans' attitudes toward sexuality and gender in the office have changed since the 1860s, when women first took jobs as clerks in the U.S.

Treasury office.and#160;Berebitsky recounts the actual experiences of female and male office workers; draws on archival sources ranging from the records of investigators looking for waste in government offices during World War II to the personal papers of Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown and Ms. magazine founder Gloria Steinem; and explores how popular sourcesincluding cartoons, advertisements, advice guides, and a wide array of fictional accountshave represented wanted and unwelcome romantic and sexual advances.

This range of evidence and the study's long scope expose both notable transformations and startling continuities in the interplay of gender, power and desire at work.

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£25.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300183275 / 9780300183276
eBook (EPUB)
27/03/2012
English
376 pages
156 x 235 mm
Copy: 10%; print: 10%