Women's bodies, gender meanings and symbolic limits in large-scale mining in Chile

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Abstract

This article seeks to unveil the ways in which women mining workers signify their bodies, as a symbolic barrier that produces segregation, discrimination and marginalization, interpreted from the notions of symbolic violence, differential value of the sexes, gender inequality, precariousness and social stigma. Using a qualitative methodology, through the analysis of 31 interviews with operators and supervisors, perceptions are interpreted and triangulated around trajectories and experiences of gender relations in large-scale mining. Corporality as a limit and violence is expressed in the sexualization of their bodies; judgment and undervaluation due to less physical force; rejection, stigmatization and trivialization of the reproductive body; as well as in demands for personifying hegemonic male traits to inspire respect, but without «losing femininity», which is classic, causing distress and confrontation.

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Molina, P. C., Alonso, H. R., & Garrido, L. A. (2020). Women’s bodies, gender meanings and symbolic limits in large-scale mining in Chile. Polis (Italy), 19(55), 114–129. https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2020-N55-1448

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